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Chapter 2 Nontectonic Structures. Nontectonic Structures. Nontectonic structures help to determine the original orientation of strata Primary structures such as mud cracks, ripples, sole marks, and vesicles help to determine original orientation
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Nontectonic Structures • Nontectonic structures help to determine the original orientation of strata • Primary structures such as mud cracks, ripples, sole marks, and vesicles help to determine original orientation • These features help us determine the facing direction of a sequence of rocks.
Nontectonic Structures • Structures that formed in primary depositional environments may mimic tectonic structures • Examples ductile flow in water-saturated silt, glacial ice, or evaporites • Primary structures are usually older than tectonic structures and cross-cutting relationships can help differentiate between them
Tectonic vs Nontectonic Structures Soft-sediment folds Slumping Tectonic folds
Primary Sedimentary Structures • Bedding • Bedding Planes • Graded Beds • Cross Bedding
Primary Sedimentary Structures • Mudcracks • Polygonal blocks formed by desiccation and shrinkage of saturated sediments • Taper down from the surface until they terminate • The surface layer may also separate and curl upward
Primary Sedimentary Structures • Ripple Marks • Current (translational) ripple marks form under a prevailing direction of fluid flow • Asymmetrical with the steep side toward downstream • Not useful to determine facing because they have the same shape whether they are upright or overturned • Oscillatory ripple marks form with back-and-forth fluid flow • Symmetrical with pointed peaks showing original facing direction
Primary Sedimentary Structures • Rain Imprints • Can determine facing direction • Tracks and Trails • May be used to determine facing direction • Sole Marks, Scour Marks, and Flute Casts • Are later filled with sediment and can be used to determine facing direction
Primary Sedimentary Structures • Load Casts • Form from dewatering of the underlying sediment from the weight of the newly deposited sediment • Can be used to determine the facing direction • The broadly convex bases of the load casts show the original bottom of the structure
Fossils • Fossils • Provide relative ages • May be used to determine facing direction based on fossil sequences or growing conditions in life assemblages • May also be used as strain indicators
Sedimentary Environments • Sedimentary Facies • Sedimentary rock units vary laterally and vertically as paleoenvironments change. • Facies are separated by composition, texture, sorting, physical and biogenic sedimentary structures. • Walther’s principle - Only those facies that once existed side-by-side can be observed vertically juxtaposed in outcrop.
Unconformities • Unconformity – A break in the sedimentary record where part of a stratigraphic succession is missing. • Produced by erosion or nondeposition • Disconformities • Angular unconformities • Nonconformities
Primary Igneous Structures • Igneous plutons and lava flows may form in shapes that resemble sedimentary features or may tectonically alter previously emplaced country rock
Primary Igneous Structures • Compositional banding • Occurs in igneous rocks and may result from crystal settling, differentiation, fractional crystallization, and multiple parallel intrusions or flows. • Study of these may reveal differentiation or fractional crystallization sequences
Primary Igneous Structures • Vesicles • Cavities left by gas bubbles that form in magma due to pressure release • Vesicles generally accumulate at the top of the magma chamber providing the facing direction
Primary Igneous Structures • Pillow Structures • Form from lava flows into or below water • Vesicular glassy curved tops and V-shaped nonvesicular bases indicate facing direction
Primary Igneous Structures • Contact Metamorphic Zones from lava flows • The metamorphic aureole forms beneath the lava flow and can be used to determine facing direction
Gravity-Related Structures • Landslide and Submarine Flows • May resemble tectonic structures because of the flow patterns of these sediments • Olistostromes are matrix supported bedded sediments • Diamictites are matrix supported sediments with no bedding • Turbidites are unsorted sedimentary deposits produced from rapid flow of sediment
Gravity-Related Structures • Salt Structures • Occur in evaporite sequences of anhydrite, gypsum, or halite • These rocks flow more readily than any other common rock type and can form folded structures under surface temperature and pressure • These structures that move upward and gravitationally intrude overlying sediments are called diapirs.
Impact Structures • Structures with circular or elliptical outlines can be formed from meteorite impacts as apposed to tectonic forces • Shatter cones are produced from brittle deformation and can be good evidence of impacts
Nontectonic Structures • Nontectonic structures can appear to be tectonic features • Nontectonic structures can also be used to determine facing direction, which can aid in the interpretation of tectonic features