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Objectives

Objectives. Identify the major types of rock deformation Understand the movements associated with fault deformation. Rock Deformation. When rocks are subjected to forces greater than their own strength causes them to deform Types of Deformation Folding Faulting Joints. Elastic Deformation.

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Objectives

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  1. Objectives • Identify the major types of rock deformation • Understand the movements associated with fault deformation

  2. Rock Deformation • When rocks are subjected to forces greater than their own strength causes them to deform • Types of Deformation • Folding • Faulting • Joints

  3. Elastic Deformation • When stress is first applied, rocks respond by deforming elastically • Reversal changes( changes back to original position) • Like a rubber band – the rock will return to nearly its original size and shape when the stress is removed

  4. Plastic Deformation • Once elastic limit is reached, rock deforms plastically or they fracture • Results in permanent changes to the size and shape of the rock • High temperatures and pressures cause deformation

  5. Simulations • Scientists have simulated how rocks respond to stress • Most rocks fracture when their elastic limit is reached • One thing that scientists cannot simulate is geologic time

  6. Geologic Time • Geologic time can cause rocks to deform rather than fracture rapidly like in the laboratory

  7. Folds • A bent rock layer or series of layers that were originally horizontal and subsequently deformed • Often occurs with flat-lying sedimentary and volcanic rocks • Types of folds • Anticlines • Synclines • Domes • Basins

  8. Anticline • Common type of fold formed from compression • The upfolding or arching of rock layers • Displayed when highways have been cut through deformed strata http://www.members.aol.com/rhaberlin/images/mbfold.gif http://www.exw6sxq.com/sparky/images/anticline_and_syncline.jpg

  9. Syncline • The downfolding or troughs of rocks http://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/images/syncline.gif

  10. Domes • Vertical displacement • The upwarping that produces a circular or elongated structure • Erosions strip way upwarped sedimentary beds, exposing older rock at center http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hills

  11. Basins • Downwarped structures • Contain sedimentary beds sloping at low angles • Younger rocks are at center, oldest rocks are at the flanks

  12. Faults • Fractures in the crust along which movement occurs • Fault zones – formed from large faults consisting of multiple interconnecting fault surfaces

  13. Dip-Slip Faults • Primarily vertical movement • Movement is along the inclination (dip) of the fault plane • Movement can be up or down fault plane • Two types • Normal faults • Reverse faults

  14. Normal faults • Hanging wall moves downward relative to the footwall http://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/geol111/deform.htm

  15. Tensional Forces • Normal faults indicate tensional stress pulling the crust apart • Graben – a valley formed by the downward displacement of a fault-bounded rock • Horst – an elongate, uplifted block of crust bounded by faults

  16. Tensional forces http://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/geol111/deform.htm

  17. Reverse Faults • Hanging wall moves upward relative to footwall http://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/geol111/deform.htm

  18. Reverse Faults • Thrust faults – reverse faults with dips less than 45 degrees • Result from strong compressional stresses http://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/geol111/deform.htm

  19. Compressional forces • When faultings are displaced toward one another • Primarily occurs at convergent boundaries • Generally produce folds as well as faults

  20. Strike-Slip Faults • Faults where the dominant displacement is along a strike, or trend • Associated with transform plate boundaries • Oblique-slip faults = Faults with horizontal and vertical movement http://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/geol111/deform.htm

  21. Joints • Fractures in rock structures where no movement occurs • Two types • Columnar joints • Sheeting

  22. Columnar Joints • Form when igneous rocks cool and develop shrinkage fractures producing elongated, pillar-like columns

  23. Sheeting • Produces a pattern of gently curved joints that develop more or less parallel to the surface of large exposed igneous bodies • Results from gradual expansion that occurs as erosion removes the pressure of the overlying load

  24. Joints • Most produced when rocks are deformed by stresses associated with crustal movements during mountain building • Can also develop in response to relatively subtle and barely perceptible upwarping and downwarping of the crust

  25. Joints • Most rocks are broken by two or three sets of intersecting joints that slide the rock in numerous regularly shaped blocks • Strong influence on other geologic process • Chemical weathering • Groundwater movement

  26. What did you learn? • What is the difference between elastic and plastic deformation? • Describe how folds and faults differ in their formation. • What type of stress causes normal, reverse, and strike-slip faults? • Briefly describe how grabens and horsts are formed? ( * Identify type of fault and movement up, down) • What direction do normal faults move? Reverse faults? Strike-slip faults? (Up/Down/Lateral)

  27. In-class Assignment/Homework • Chapter Review Questions page 278 #1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 Draw and Label a Normal, Reverse, and Thrust Fault. * Make sure you label the Footwall and Hanging Wall. Due Thursday when you walk into class

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