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geology - ROCK [dictionary]
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ROCK (general) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ARGILLACEOUS - A term used to describe clay-rich rocks. BASEMENT ROCK - a thick strata of old metamorphic and igneous rock that forms the continental crust. It is the rock layer where no sedimentary rock lies beneath. S.A: craton, shield CAST - Fossils formed when water containing minerals leaks into a mold. The minerals harden to form a copy of the original structure or organism. COBBLE - Loose particles of rock or mineral (sediment) that range in size from 64-256 millimeters in diameter. COUNTRY ROCK - generally used to note a common regional strata being discussed or observed GEOPETAL STRUCTURE - a set of criteria for determining the original up direction in sedimentary and igneous rocks. GLACIAL DRIFT - glacial till that has been "sorted" by other processes after the glacier has melted. GLACIAL TILL - unsorted earth & rock deposited & transported within a glacier LAPILLI - latin for little stones ; basically a size classification for volcanic tephra. S.A: pyroclast MAGMA - Usually a silicate melt (liquid) at high temperatures (650 to 1200°C) Mixture of all the elements that make up minerals plus volatile components: H2O, CO2, Cl, F, S , Cl, F, S ; These components form gases and will boil off when pressure is released. PALEOMAGNETISM - a branch of geophysics concerned with the magnetism in rocks that was induced by the earth's magnetic field at the time of their formation. PROTOLITH – The country rock from which a metamorphic rock was formed REGOLITH - soil, sediment and broken rock immediately above a rock surface. RESERVOIR ROCK - A porous and permeable subsurface rock that contains petroleum that must be overlayed by an impermeable rock layer to keep the bouyant hydrocarbons from floating upward. S.A: source rock SAPROLITE - soft, thoroughly decomposed rock usually clay rich and highly porous common to humid or tropical areas where high rates of chemical weathering exist. SOURCE ROCK - A sedimentary rock in which petroleum forms. XENOLITH - a piece of rock within an igneous rock that is not part of the original magma. IGNEOUS ROCK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AA LAVA - a viscous and chunky slow moving basaltic lava ; S.A: pahoehoe lava APHANITIC - An igneous rock texture in which individual mineral grains are too small to be distinguished with the naked eye ; S.A: phaneritic BATHOLITH - a massive volume (greater than 100 square kilometers / 40 square miles) of intrusive igneous rock that forms when magma solidifies at depth. DIKEs - sheet-like igneous intrusions that cut across layers of bedrock s.a: sill, lacolith. IGNIMBRITE - a non-sanctioned term for igneous rocks made up of crystal and rock fragments in a glass-shard groundmass. LACOLITHs - igneous blister-like sills. PAHOEHOE LAVA - is a smooth or ropy basaltic lava ; S.A: aa lava PHANERITIC - an igneous rock texture featuring large crystals. S.A: aphanetic PHENOCRYST - a conspicuous crystal in a porphyritic rocks PLUTON - Any body of igneous rock that solidified below the earth’s surface. PORPHYRITIC - an igneous rock texture containing distinct crystals or crystalline particles embedded in a fine-grained mass. PYROCLASTICs - the non-lava fragments associated with an explosive volcano eruption - such as ash, pumice, obsidian and pyroclastic rocks ; SYN: TEPHRA PYROCLASTIC FLOW - a fast moving current of hot gas and pyroclastic material. SILL - A sheet-like igneous intrusion that parallels the plane of the surrounding rock. TEPHRA - SYN. PYROCLASTICs TUFF - extensive deposits of volcanic ash. VESCULAR - pitted texture from escaping gas bubbles DACITE - a felsic extrusive rock intermediate in composition between andesite and rhyolite ; S.A: Vulcanian eruption KOMATIITE - a rare mantle-derived ultramafic volcanic rock generally of Archaean age ; extrusive / spinifex texture / Africa OBSIDIAN - a glassy felsic pyroclastic. PEGMATITE - (porphyritic ?) intrusive igneous rock with large crystals PERIDOTITE - an ultramafic (mantle) rock composed almost entirely of olivine, with some pyroxene. Similar rocks are eclogites, which contain olivine, pyroxene and garnet. SCORIA - a sponge-like volcanic foam, of basaltic composition; it is spongy from the large number of vesicles left by escaping gas in the melt. SEDIMENTARY ROCK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BRECCIA - a type of clastic sedimentary rock that contains angular clasts. S.A: conglomerate CHEMICAL SEDIMENTARY ROCK - Sedimentary rock composed of minerals that were precipitated from water. CLAST - An individual grain or constituent of a rock ; S.A: clastic rock, conglomerate, breccia CLINOTHEM - rock units generated by strata which gently prograde seawards. CONGLOMERATE - a type of clastic sedimentary rock that contains rounded clasts. S.A: breccia CROSS-BEDDING - (1) The arrangement of sedimentary beds tilted at different angles to each other, indicating that the beds were deposited by flowing wind or water. (2) inclined beds in a sedimentary rock that were formed at the time of deposition of currents of wind or water in the direction in which the bed slopes downward. CYCLOTHEM - alternating stratagraphic sequences of marine and non-marine sediments. DIAGENESIS - the lithification process of sediments into rock ; including all physical, chemical, and biological steps along the way. DEPOSITION - the laying down of rock forming minerals by natural processes. EXTRABASINAL - rock derived from parent rock weathered outside the depositional basin and transported into the lithification area. INTRABASINAL - rock derived from parent rock weathered within the depositional basin. REGRESSION - A drop in sea level that causes an area of the land to be uncovered by seawater which changes the sedimentary environment and changes in the sequence stratagraphy. SEDIMENTARY FACIES - lateral changes in depositional environment within a single unit. SEDIMENTARY STRUCTURES - patterns formed by depositional and environmental processes that are often preserved in strata. These include the grading (sorting by size) of sediment grains, ripple marks, cross-beds and animal tracks. They are used by geologists to infer the environment into which the sediments were deposited SEDIMENT - a solid fragment of silt, sand, gravel, or fossil transported and deposited by water, wind, or ice. TRANSGRESSION - A rise in sea level relative to the land which changes the sedimentary environment and changes in the sequence stratagraphy. TURBIDITY CURRENT - A fast-flowing current that moves down a slope depositing suspended sediments over the floor of a body of water. Underwater landslide. ANTHRACITE - hard coal. BITUMINOUS COAL - primary source of industrial heat generating coal. DOLOSTONE – a magnesia-rich sedimentary rock resembling limestone, only fizzes in HCl when scratched. METAMORPHIC ROCK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ACF DIAGRAM - a triangular diagram showing a simplified molecular character for metamorphic rock AMF DIAGRAM - a triangular diagram showing a simplified molecular character for pelitic metamorphic rock ; old term form mudstone AUGEN - Augen are relatively large, eye-shaped mineral grains in certain types of metamorphic rocks. CATACLATIC ROCK - a metamorphic rock commonly associated with fault zones of high pressure and low-temperature CONTACT METAMORPHISM - Metamorphism caused by heat from an igneous intrusion. CRENULATION - a fabric or wavy texture in metamorphic rocks. DYNAMIC METAMORPHISM - orogenic movement and differential stresses that crush, shear, and grind the parent rock into a new assemblage of minerals at relatively low temperatures and high pressures. FOLIATION – Pressure induced layering of metamorphic rocks as noted in the parallel alignment of minerals METAMORPHIC FACIES - zones of metamorphic rock wherein the metamorphic mineralogy suggests different pressure and temperature conditions than adjacent zones. PROGRADE METAMORPHISM - changes in mineral assemblage and mineral composition that occur during burial and heating. REGIONAL METAMORPHISM - occurs over very large areas, such as deep within the cores of rising mountain range or along subduction zones, and can be accompanied by folding and shearing of rock layers. RETROGRADE METAMORPHISM - changes in mineral assemblage and mineral composition that occur during uplift and cooling . S-C FABRIC - a metamorphic fabric / foliation formed by the intersection of shear surfaces of rocks undergoing dynamic metamorphism ; very common in mylonites ; TECTONITE - a class of metamorphic rock formed by tectonic forces FAULT BRECCIA [tectonite] - formed in zones of brittle deformation GOUGE [tectonite] - has no cohesion and is normally unconsolidated ; Cf. fault gouge MYLONITE [cataclastic tectonite-foliated] - formed in zones of ductile deformation at approx. 9km deep. AMPHIBOLITE - [ foliated coarse-grained ][ hornblende group ][parent - gabbro] composed mainly of green, brown, or black amphibole minerals and plagioclase feldspar. QUARTZITE – [ nonfoliated ] formed from sandstones rich in quartz sand grains and quartz cement
METAMORPHIC ROCK -- color images
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