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Rocks Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography Geography summer term B 2010 summer term B 2010
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Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

RocksRocks

GEOG 3251 Mountain GeographyGEOG 3251 Mountain Geography

summer term B 2010summer term B 2010

Page 2: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Rock cycle

Page 3: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Definition & classificationDefinition & classification

• Rock = a naturally occurring aggregate of minerals and/or mineraloids.

• Classification: mineral and chemical composition; the texture of the constituent particles processes that formed them.

Page 4: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Types of rocks

igneous sedimentary metamorphic

Page 5: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Igneous rocksIgneous rocks

Formed from molten magma (latin ignis = "fire")

2 types: intrusive: magma cools and crystallises slowly

within the Earth's crust extrusive: magma reaches the surface either as

lava or fragmental ejecta.

Page 6: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Classification based on mode of Classification based on mode of occurrenceoccurrence

CompositionMode of occurrence Acid Intermediate Basic Ultrabasic

Intrusive Granite Diorite Gabbro PeridotiteExtrusive Rhyolite Andesite Basalt

Page 7: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Based on compositionBased on composition

Page 8: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.
Page 9: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

FELSIC ROCKS: texture

IntrusiveExtrusive

Muyextrusive

Granite Rhyolite Obsidian

coarser finer

Page 10: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Yosemite Valley: El CapitanYosemite Valley: El Capitan

Intrusive: slow cooling, large texture

Page 11: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

ARROWHEADSARROWHEADS

Extrusive: fast cooling, fine texture Obsidian

Page 12: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Igneous Rock TypesIgneous Rock Types

Figure 11.7

Page 13: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Sedimentary rocksSedimentary rocks

• Two ways of forming:– from overburden pressure as particles of

sediment are deposited out of air, ice;

– chemical precipitates (water flows carrying the particles in suspension), eg. carbonate-rich sediments

Page 14: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.
Page 15: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.
Page 16: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

What makes the Flatirons so What makes the Flatirons so good for climbing?good for climbing?

Type of rock?

•Sandstone •conglomerate

-large particles-good handholds

Page 17: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

LimestoneLimestone(Ca CO3)(Ca CO3)• Piatra

Craiului, Carpathians (Romania)

• Karst landscape

Page 18: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Limestone cavesLimestone caves

Page 19: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.
Page 20: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Metamorphic rocksMetamorphic rocks

• formed by subjecting any rock type (including previously-formed metamorphic rock) to different temperature and pressure conditions than those in which the original rock was formed

Page 21: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Metamorphic rocksMetamorphic rocks

• Foliated: stress that deforms the rock in one plane, e.g. slate is a foliated metamorphic rock, originating from shale.

• Non-foliated: do not have planar patterns of stress; rocks that were subjected to uniform pressure from all

Page 22: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

SLATESLATE

Because slate easily flakes, it’s ideal forFloors, roofs, blackboards.

Page 23: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

GNEISSGNEISS

Gneiss is characterized by a banded or foliated pattern.Granite is a precursor rock to gneiss

Page 24: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Stress vs.strainStress vs.strain

• Stress = force per unit area

• Strain = amount of deformation an object experiences compared to its original size and shape– Compression: Longitudinal strain that

shortens an object. – Tension: Longitudinal strain that lengthens an

object.

Page 25: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

Behavior of MaterialsBehavior of Materials

• Elastic – Material deforms under stress but returns to its

original size and shape when the stress is released.

• Plastic – Material does not flow until a threshold stress has

been exceeded.

• Brittle – Material deforms by fracturing. Glass is brittle.

Rocks typically brittle at low temps and pressures.

Page 26: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

How do rocks behave when subjected to How do rocks behave when subjected to stress?stress?

Page 27: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

FoldingFolding

Page 28: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.

FaultingFaulting

Page 29: Rocks GEOG 3251 Mountain Geography summer term B 2010.