DR-KNOW / IQ-2k Information Serv.
GEOLOGY [ DICTIONARY ]
______________________________________
ORTHO- (prefix) a metamorphic rocke derivied from an igneous rock PETRO- (prefix) related ro rocks -ZOIC (suffix) __ A __ ABLATION - loss of ice at the lower end of a glacier ; INDEX - goemorphology - glaciology ABRASION - is a form of physical weathering where rocks tumble over one another rounding corners from angular, to sub-rounded, to rounded ; INDEX - goemorphology - weathering ABSOLUTE TIME - the geologic age of a fossil, rock, geologic feature, or event given in years ; although the time may NOT be as accurate or precise in the strictest use of the term ; INDEX - historical geology ACCRETE - To add terranes (small land masses or pieces of crust) to another, usually larger, land mass ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics ACID MINE DRAINAGE - a toxic hazard where pyrite, an iron sulfide, is exposed and reacts with air and water to form sulfuric acid and dissolved iron. The hazard can be further exascerabeted by certain bacteria. ACTIVE MARGIN - an area of seismic activity and active volcanoes or growing mountians on the leading edge of a continent that is "crashing" into an oceanic plate ; S.A: (continent-ocean) convergent plate boundary ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics ALPHA DECAY - Ejection of two protons and two neutrons (Helium nucleus) from the nucleus ; INDEX - historical geology ALPHA EMISSION (radiometic dating) ; INDEX - historical geology ALPINE GLACIER - SYN. VALLEY GLACIER AMPHIBOLE - A family of silicate minerals forming prism or needlelike crystals. Amphibole minerals generally contain iron, magnesium, calcium and aluminum in varying amounts, along with water. ANTICLINE - A fold of rock layers that is convex upwards ; INDEX - structural geology ASTHENOSPHERE - the part of the mantle that lies below the lithosphere at 100-to- 200 km below the surface. This highly viscous layer can extend to 700 km and is involved in plate tectonic movement ; INDEX - physical geology __ B __ BED LOAD - material that moves by rolling, sliding, and/or saltating (hopping) ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion BETA DECAY - Transformation of a neutron into a proton by ejecting an electron from one of the neutrons in the nucleus ; INDEX - historical geology BETA EMISSION - is the result of beta decay ; INDEX - historical geology BIOSTRATIGRAPHY - The study of rock layers based on their fossils including distribution, environment of deposition, and age ; S.A: fossil correlation __ C __ CARBINATION - the reaction of carbonate and bicarbonate ions with minerals. Carbonation is especially active when the reaction environment is abundant with carbon dioxide ; INDEX - goemorphology - weathering CATASTROPHISM - is the idea that geomorphic changes have occurred due to violent or unusual events ; floods, earthquakes or lava flows ; INDEX - physical geology CHEMICAL WEATHERING - The process that changes the chemical makeup of a rock or mineral at or near the Earth’s surface ; INDEX - goemorphology CLEAVAGE - The tendency of a mineral to break along weak planes. CONTACTS - boundaries between different rock types or formations ; INDEX - field geology CONTINENTAL DRIFT - A hypothesis proposed by Alfred Wegener suggesting that the continents are not stationary, but have 'drifted' through time ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics CONTINENTAL MARGIN - The ocean floor from the shore of continents to the abyssal plain ; INDEX - physical geology - geography CONTOUR INTERVAL - is the consistent vertical change on a topographic map ; INDEX - field geology CONTOUR LINES - a visible line on a topographic map connecting points of equal elevation ; INDEX - field geology CONVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY - A boundary in which two tectonic plates collide ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics COVALENT BOND - the sharing of electron pairs between atoms ; S.A: minerals, elements. CRATON - A part of the Earth's crust that has attained stability and has been little deformed for a long period of time. CREEP - slow dowhill movement of regolith due to seasonal expansion and contraction that results from freeze / thaw and wet / dry cycles ; S.A: mass wasting ; INDEX - geomorphology - erosion CROSS SECTION - vertical slices into the earth that are used to interpret the geology at depth. The geological data (contacts, dips of formations, etc.) are projected from the surface into the cross section to predict what might be down there ; INDEX - field geology CRUST - The outermost layer of the Earth, varying in thickness from about 10 KM below the oceans, to 65 kilometers below the continents ; INDEX - physical geology CRTYSTAL FORM - the geometric shape of a crystal. CRTYSTAL HABIT - refers to the general crystal forms and combinaton in which a mineral habitually forms. __ D __ DAUGHTER ATOMS (radiometic dating) ; INDEX - physical geology DEEP-FOCUS EARTHQUAKE - is an earthquake with a hypocenter exceeding 300 KM in depth almost exclusively found at convergent plate boundaries. The deepest recorded was just over 700 KM ; INDEX - physical geology DIFFERENTIAL EROSION - variable rates of rock weathering associated with resistance of rock to weathering. While softer are eroded and carried away, harder and more resistant rocks remain to form ridges, hills, or mountains ; SYN. DIFFERENTIAL WEATHERING ; INDEX - geomorphology DIFFERENTIAL WEATHERING - SYN. DIFFERENTIAL EROSION DISCRETE CONTACT - a map-unit boundary that is individually distinct; that is, the transition between geologic units is abrupt enough to be recognized and delineated easily on the map ; INDEX - field geology - geologic map DISSOLVED LOAD - a significant portion of the total stream load where chemically dissolved sediment combines with bed load & sediment load within a stream ; INDEX - geomorphology - erosion DISSOLUTION - the hydrolysis of limestone and rocks high in salt ; S.A: hydrolysis ; INDEX - geomorphology - weathering DIVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY - tectonic plate margins where forces deep within the earth are forcing tectonic plates apart creating rift zones ; S.A: MOR ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics DOUBLY PLUNGING FOLD - fold axis is plunging in two opposite directions, results in a flattened oval pattern, or a double V-shaped pattern <<< >>>> ; INDEX - structural geology __ E __ ECONOMIC GEOLOGY - is concerned with earth materials that can be used for economic and/or industrial purposes. These materials include precious and base metals, nonmetallic minerals, construction-grade stone, petroleum minerals, coal, and water. EFFUSIVE ERUPTION - a steady non-explosive flow of lava. EPICENTER - Point on the Earth's surface directly above the focus of an earthquake ; INDEX - physical geology EROSION - sediment transport by wind, water, glaciers, or gravity ; S.A: mass wasting / landslide ; INDEX - goemorphology EUSTASY - a change in sea level throughout the world caused by glaciation or tectonic plate movement ; S.A: isostacy ; INDEX - physical geology __ F __ FEILD GEOLOGY - a geologic practice that applies first-hand observation in the field. FLANK ERUPTION - an eruption from the side of a volcano rather than the summit ; SYN. LATERAL ERUPTION FORENSIC GEOLOGY - interpretation of geological evidence at crime scenes FORMATION - a distinctive body of rock that is large enough to symbolize on a geologic map ; S.A: rock unit, (rock) group, member ; INDEX - field geology FRACTIONAL SCALE - a map feature that denotes the mathematical reduction of distance usually the expression 1:xxxx ; Sg. 1:1000 - could mean 1-to-1000 feet, kilometers, ect. ; INDEX - field geology FROST WEDGING - a form of physical weathering that breaks rocks by liquid water freezing within a pore space and exerting an outward force ; SYN. ICE WEDGING INDEX - geomorphology - weathering __ G __ GEOLOGIC CONTACT - is where one rock type touches another - there are 3 types of contacts ; depostional contact, intrusion contact, unconformable contact ; INDEX - field geology GEOLOGIC MAPS - Maps that show the types and ages of rock of an area ; INDEX - field geology GEOLOGIC TIME - combines the concepts of "absolute time" and "relative time" in a scale that covers the roughly 4.6 billion years of Earth's history ; INDEX - historical geology GEOMAGNETISM - the study of the dynamics of earth's magnetic shield ; INDEX - earth science - geology ; GEOTHERMAL GRADIENT - is the rate of increasing temperature with respect to increasing depth in the Earth's interior. Away from tectonic plate boundaries, it is about 25–30 °C/km ; INDEX - physical geology GRADIENT (topographic) - is the change in elevation divided by the distance usually reported in feet per mile (ft/mile) ; INDEX - field geology GRADATIONAL CONTACT - a map-unit boundary that is diffuse; that is, the transition between geologic units is gradual enough that it cannot be recognized or delineated easily on the map ; INDEX - field geology - geologic map __ H __ HISTORICAL GEOLOGY -(see.also.paleogeology) is a discipline that uses the principles and techniques to reconstruct the geological history of Earth. HYDRATION - an inorganic chemical reaction where the rigid attachment of H+ and OH- ions to a reacted compound. In many situations the H and OH ions become a structural part of the crystal lattice of the mineral ; INDEX - goemorphology - weathering HYDROLYSIS - the reaction between mineral ions and the ions of water (OH- and H+). Its the primary method of weathering silicate and alumino-silicate minerals because of their electrically charged crystal surfaces ; S.A: DISSOLUTION ; INDEX - goemorphology - weathering HYDROGEOLOGY - the study of subsurface waters (groundwater) and the related geologic aspects of surface waters. HYPOCENTER - the point within the earth where an earthquake rupture starts ; S.A: epicenter ; INDEX - physical geology __ I __ ICE WEDGING - SYN. FROST WEDGING ICE WEDGE POLYGON - the most common ground pattern in the Arctic due to freeze thaw cycles ; INDEX - geomorphology ICHNOLOGY - The study of trace fossils ; INDEX - field geology INDEX CONTOUR - are the darkened contour lines on a topographic map that add contrast for better visual representation of vertical gradient ; INDEX - field geology INDEX FOSSILS - are fossils that are particularly useful in biostratigraphic correlation. These are widespread geographically and only live for a short time geologically ; INDEX - historical geology ISOSTASY - a theory which states that the earth's crust behaves like blocks floating on the mantle in a state of equilibrium - thus falling and rising as material is either added or removed ; S.A: eustasy ; INDEX - physical geology __ J __ __ K __ KEY BED - an easily identifiable stratigraphic marker bed within a geologic unit. Commonly it is too thin to depict as a map-unit area at most map scales, and so it usually is classified as a planar geologic feature ; INDEX - field geology - geologic map __ L __ LATERAL ERUPTION- SYN. FLANK ERUPTION LAW OF CROSS-CUTTING RELATIONSHIP - a relative dating concept in historical geology which states that older rock must exist before a cross-cut occurs ; INDEX - historical geology LAW OF INCLUSION - a relative dating concept in historical geology which states that an inclusion must be older than the rock it becomes an inclusion in ; INDEX - historical geology LAW OF LATERAL CONTINUITY - a relative dating concept in historical geology which states that horizontal deposition contiues laterally without an abrupt end ; INDEX - historical geology LAW OF ORIGINAL HORIZONTALITY - a relative dating concept in historical geology which states that horizontal deposition preceeds all other processes ; INDEX - historical geology LAW OF SUPERPOSITION - a relative dating concept in historical geology which states that the youngest rock layers exist at the top of a horizontal stratagraphic column and become progressively older as you move down the column ; INDEX - historical geology LITHOSPHERE - is comprised of the crust and upper portion of the mantle with a thickness between 50 & 150 km ; INDEX - physical geology __ M __ MAGMATIC ERUPTION - gas-driven explosion of magma and tephra. MASS WASTING - an erosional process due to gravity ; S.A: landslide ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion MECHANICAL WEATHERING - SYN. PHYSICAL WEATHERING MEMBER - subdivision of a formation ; S.A: rock unit MINERAL - a naturally occuring inorganic chemical compound with a regular internal structure ; S.A: petrology - rock MOLD (see.also. cast) - is created when a shell is buried and is later dissolved by underground water leaving and open space. MONOCLINE - a step-like fold in a rock strata ; INDEX - structural geology __ N __ NORMAL FAULT - faults in which crustal block above the fault plane (hanging wall) move down relative to crustal block below the fault plane (foot wall) ; INDEX - structural geology NONCONFORMITY - exists when sedimentary rocks lay above metamorphic or igneous rock layers. Therefore a time gap (unconformity) exists due to the unknown amount of erosion ; INDEX - historical geology __ O __ OBLIQUE-SLIP FAULT - a fault with both vertical and horizontal components of movement ; INDEX - structural geology OCEANIC CRUST - The Earth's crust which is formed at mid-oceanic ridges, typically 5 - 10 KM thick ; INDEX - physical geology OCEANIC LITHOSPHERE - typically the 50-100 KM of mafic crust and ultramafic upper mantle that is no older that 200 million years since it is created at divergent tectonic boundaries and recycled at subduction zones ; INDEX - physical geology OROGENY - The tectonic processes of folding, faulting, and uplifting of the earth’s crust that result in the formation of mountains. OUTCROP - Any place where bedrock is visible on the surface of the Earth ; INDEX - field geology OXIDATION - a form of chemical weathering where oxygen reacts with other elements in the rock ; INDEX - goemorphology - weathering __ P __ 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 ; INDEX - historical geology PARACONFORMITY - a near conformity disconformity with no discernible erosional surface, but a distinct gap in the fossil record ; INDEX - historical geology PASSIVE MARGIN - is a transition between oceanic and continental lithospheres that is not a plate boundary ; INDEX - geomorphology - tectonics PELEAN ERUPTION - characterized by one massive explosion with a tall column and fast moving pyroclastic flow. PERIGLACIAL (zone,region,environment) - landforms and processess at the edges of glaciated areas ; S.A: permafrost ; INDEX - geomorphology - glaciology PERMAFROST - organics and soil (regolith) that remains frozen (0 C) for two or more years ; INDEX - geomorphology PERMINERIZATION - Fossilization process that occurs when minerals, carried by ground water, enter and harden in the pores of an organism’s structures. PETROLOGY - study of rocks, including information on chemistry; classification; mineralogy, occurrence, shape and structure of rock masses (petrography), and rock origins (Petrogenesis) ; INDEX - physical geology PHANEROZOIC - The geologic eon that includes the interval of time from approximately 543 million years ago to the present, comprising the Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic eras ; INDEX - historical geology PHREATIC ERUPTION - also called a steam-blast eruption where magma heats ground or surface water into a blast of steam, water, ash and rock. PHREATOMAGMATIC ERUPTION - results from interaction of water with magma PHYSICAL GEOLOGY - is the study of the earth's rocks, minerals, and soils and how they have formed through time. PHYSICAL WEATHERING - a process that break rocks without changing its chemical compostion ; SYN. MECHANICAL WEATHERING ; INDEX - goemorphology PLINIAN ERUPTION - SYN. VULCANIAN ERUPTION PLUNGING FOLDs - folds in which the fold axis is dipping; the direction the fold axis is dipping is called the plunge direction ; INDEX - structural geology PRIME MERIDIAN - a map feature to establish a geographic grid between E-&-W longitude. The prime meridian, or 0 degrees E-W longitude, was established at Greenwich, England in 1884 ; INDEX - field geology __ Q __ __ R __ REGOLITH - soil, sediment and broken rock immediately above a rock surface. RELATIVE DATING - a method of determining which rocks are older or younger in a large-scale geographic feature ; INDEX - historical geology RELIEF (topographic) - is the numerical difference between the highest and lowest elevation on a topographic map ; INDEX - field geology REVERSE FAULT - faults in which crustal block above the fault plane (hanging wall) moves up relative to crustal block below the fault plane (foot wall) ; S.A: thrust fault ; INDEX - structural geology RIDGE PUSH - a source of potential energy for tectonic plate movement due to the high ridges formed at divergent plate boundaries. Vertical gravity force moving down the ridge tranlates to a lateral force due to the curvature of earth to supply some energy for tectonic plate movement ; INDEX - geomorphology - tectonics ROCK - a solid aggregate of one or more minerals ; S.A: coal, halite - rock salt, ice. ROCK CYCLE - The process through which one type of rock (igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic) is converted into another. ROCK GLACIER - a mass wasting erosion process similar to glacial erosion except the ratio of ice and rock are reversed ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion (rock) GROUP - two or more (rock) formations. ROCK UNIT - three-dimensional bodies of rock characterized by a particular physical attribute (rock type, color, etc.) ; INDEX - field geology __ S __ SALTATION - a sediment transport process that moves large material by a hoping or bouncing motion ; S.A: traction ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion SALT CRYSTALLIZATION - a form of physical weathering similar to frost wedging. This type of weathering occurs when salt water penetrates rock pores and generates salt crystals as the water evaporates. The crystal growth produces an outward force ; INDEX - goemorphology - weathering SEA-FLOOR SPREADING - The process of adding to the Earth's crust at mid-ocean ridges as magma wells up and forces previously formed crust apart ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics SEDIMENT LOAD - particles that are too large to be dissolved, but small enough to stay suspended. The ultimate size of the particle carried in the sediment load is dependent upon the water velocity ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion SLAB PULL - Where gravity pulls a cold subducting plate down into the mantle at a subduction zone. Additional energy is added by mantle convection currents to create "slab suction" ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics SLUMPING - a type of mass wasting erosion often called a slope failure ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion SOLIFLUCTION - similar to creep, this form of mass wasting occurs when water saturated soil, like thawing permafrost, slowly moves downhill to create distinctive features called solifluction lobes ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion SPHEROIDAL WEATHERING - a type of chemical weathering that rounds off angluar rock surfaces due to the larger surface areas ; INDEX - goemorphology STENO's LAWS OF STRATIGRAPHY - Nicolaus Steno, a Danish geologist, proposed a set of rules to describe patterns in rock layers ; INDEX - historical geology STRATUM - a single rock bed ; INDEX - field geology STRATA - a group of rock beds ; INDEX - field geology STRATIGRAPHIC COLUMNS - vertical representations of thethicknesses of the various formations in a given area ; INDEX - field geology STRATIGRAPHY - The study of rock layers, especially their distribution, environment of deposition, and age ; INDEX - field geology STREAM LOAD - the solid matter carried by a stream as bed shear stresses increase to remove material from the stream bed ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion STROMBOLIAN ERUPTION - a volcanic eruption characterized by short-lived, explosive eruptions of lavas with intermediate viscosity that are driven by bursting gas bubbles in the magma. Often result in high arching volcanic bombs and lapilli ; S.A: cinder cones, scoria STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY - the origin of geological features produced by stresses within the earth's crust (such as folds and faults) SUBDUCTION - A geologic process in which one edge of one crustal plate is forced below the edge of another ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics SURTSEYAN ERUPTION - a phreatomagmatic eruption that takes place in shallow seas or lakes. SYNCLINE - A fold of rock layers that is convex downwards ; INDEX - structural geology __ T __ TERRANE - A general term used to refer to a piece of the crust that is usually smaller than a continent but larger than an island ; INDEX - physical geology THEORY OF PLATE TECTONICS - is the "grand unifying theory" of geology. Sg. evolution - biology ; gravity - physics ; INDEX - goemorphology THRUST FAULT - a reverse fault with very low angle, or very gently inclined fault plane ( < 30 degrees) ; INDEX - structural geology TRACTION - a sediment transport process that moves large material by rolling or sliding across the bottom of a river or stream bringing interaction with the sbustratum ; S.A. saltation ; INDEX - goemorphology - erosion TRANSFORM PLATE BOUNDARY - is a tectonic margin where two plates are sliding past each other creating seismic zones like the San Andreas fault ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics __ U __ UNCONFORMITY : ANGULAR UNCONFORMITY, DISCONFORMITY ; INDEX - historical geology UNIFORMITARIANISM - is the idea that geomorphic processes occuring today are the same as those in the past - these processes are continuous and "uniform". This theory incorporated and replaced the idea of "catastrophism" ; INDEX - physical geology __ V __ VALE CURVE - a curve that represents the rise and fall of sea level ; INDEX - geomorphology VERTICAL EXAGGERATION - is a topographic profile feature that uses a smaller fractional scale for the vertical axis than the fractional scale for the horizontal axis to create a more dramatic representation of topographic relief ; INDEX - field geology VESUVIAN ERUPTION - can last for hours or days with the highest explosive columns that expand and mushroom at the top ; SYN. PLINIAN ERUPTION VOLCANIC EXPLOSIVITY INDEX - a relative measure of the explosiveness of volcanic eruption from 0-to-8 developed by USGS in 1982. VULCANIAN ERUPTION - a highly explosive event with columns reaching as high as 10km. The highly viscous lava is andesitic to dacitic rather than basaltic. __ W __ WADATI-BENIOFF ZONE - is a planar zone of seismicity associated with subducting tectonic plates. A planar zone where deep-focus earthquakes can occur ; INDEX - goemorphology - tectonics WEATHERING - two primary processes that breaks large rock into progressively smaller rocks and then soil ; S.A: chemical weathering, physical weathering, erosion ; INDEX - goemorphology __ X __ __ Y __ __ Z __
(c) 2019-2018 DR-KNOW
IQ-2k Information Services
top
home
GEOLOGY
articles
podcasts
videos
Information eQuation (BOOK)
Information eQuation (examples)
EMAIL COMMENTS to DR-KNOW
Please support this web site: give any amount via
PAYPAL ("money TRANSFER") to todd@dr-know.biz