Plate techtonics
November 1, 2006
Plate techtonics -> equivelent of Survival of Fittest in Biology
3 major Boundry Types
- Ridge
- Divergent margin
- Formation of new oceanic crust by sea floor spreading
- Ocean crust -> denser, more mafic, basalt
- Extensional Regime, normal faults, shallow seismicity
- High Heat flow, decompression melting
- Intrusive igneous -> gabbro and basalt (essp. pillow basalts)
- Highly fractured rocks -> alot of water goes through -> causes differences in carbon weathering
- Tends to fault in three geometric paterns (third often failing to spread)
- Tends to also have reafs at shelf slope break
- Starts by bowing up, then breaking, finally filling with lakes then ocean
- Oceanic crust is much thinner than continental crust
- Convergent Margin
- Recycling of old, cool oceanic crust (subduction)
- Older = Colder = less boyant
- Reverse or thrust faulting
- Deep seismicity
- Increaed Temp = Partial melting of mafic crust = felsic magma
- Compression leads to deformation, metamorphism and mountain building
- Water, accumulated in pourse ocean basin
- Water brought down into asthenosphere = decreasing melting point = more rising magma = mountain building
- Also, happens in Continent Continent collision (India subducting under Eurasia) -> causes deformation = himalias
- Also, happens in Ocean Ocean collision -> causes island arc = japan
- When passive margin collides, subduction reverses causing forlorn basin (like western interior basin in N. America)
- Transform margins
- No new crust forms
- Shear regime -> strike-slip faults, shallow seimicity
- San. Andres
- Hot spots are fixed points, thus things like Hawaiian islands, show direction and rate of plate movement
- Magnetic liniations -> lavas on land dated, and reversal history -> reversal history matched to magnetic liniations, giving us time frames
Driving Forces
- Mantal Convection (differences in heat)
- Ridge push or slab pull? -> slab pull is thermal model, push is topographic model
- Subducted material goes down to the core mantel boundry
- Icehouses and Greenhouses, match up with rates of volcanism
- The Wilson Cycle (200my cycle), length of ocean basins determains CO2 levels
Implications
Rivers
October 16, 2006
Hypsometric profile (a significant portion is between 2 and 0 or -4 and -6)
Trenches (found where plate is subducting)
Abyssal planes (Oceanic crust spreading away from trench tword subduction)
Elevation = f(uplift – erosion) or techtonic activity – climate
Both uplift and erosion do about .01 – 10 mm/y
A difference of .5mm/y -> 5 km over 10My
Agents of Sediment removal
- Glaciers -> not alot of work
- Streams -> doing alot of work
Hydrologic cycle (Evaporation and Precipitation)
- Oceans E>P
- Land P>E
Streams are small (1 bases point) and short lived (2 weeks), but they do all the work
Underground water -> huge amount, flows tword sea, we don’t know alot about it (could be HUGEly important, but noone knows)
Rivers
- Amazon is in rainforest (hot and wet) so its not a surprise it has a high flux to drain ratio (heat and pressure are the controls on chemical weathering
- Water Table -> cut off between surface and ground water
- Laminar flow vs Turbulent flow (laminar is mellow, turbulent causes erosion)
- Sheet flow vs Channel Flow (sheet is water across land which forms into channels)
- Controls
- Velocity of flow (function of gradiant)
- Geometry (depth, shape)
- Density and viscosity (almost always water)
- Surface roughness (what its moving over)
- Infiltration capacity
- Pre-existing features (special things)
- Friction is a good control of velocity
- Streams deposit in point bars (where water is slowest)
- Flooding causes fine grain to deposit in plane around the river
- Channel types
- Broad and shallow (arid environment, fast, desert flash flood)
- Deep and narrow (meandering streams, human enviornment, mostly suspended load, more coheasive soil)
- Channel Pattern
- Proximal, Aird climent, bed load streams
- Distal Humid Suspended load
- Grain size is a function of flow velocity above mud
- Below sand -> clays stick together acting like larger particals
- Bedload -> stick to bottom, move through rolling, sliding, saltation
- Creates bedform
- size of particals = competence, controlled by speed
- Number of particals = discharge
- grains build up in beforms (like sand dunes)
- Ripples are 1-3 cm
- >3cm = dunes (some times fractals)
- Ripples form at low velocity
- Dunes at high
- Flow Regine concept
- Suspended load -> carried through turbulation
- Types of Streams
- Aluvial Fans
- Poximal
- Arid -> High velocity
- Intermittant
- Immature
- Bedload
- Braided
- Broad Shallow channels (really shallow)->Dominately bedload
- Transporting sand
- arid to semi-arid->Sparse vegitation
- Easily eroded banks
- Veriable flow
- Course to Medium Grained
- Poor to Moderate Sorting
- Meandering Stream
- Has the cutbank and point bar (one is on the other side of the other)
- Fining upword sequance
- Oxbow lakes (abandoned loops due to flooding eroading a new path)
- Distal, humid,veg, lowlands (veg soils are more cohesive making them harder to erode)
- Single deep channel
- Constant flow and high velocity
- Suspended load
- Finer Grained, moderate to well sorted (due to loss of grains because these are distal, sorting is proximal vs distal)
- Lateral Acreation surfaces (where you can see the fining process)
- Higher sand to mud ratio
- Deltas
- Stream velocity drops -> as does sediment (both bed and suspended)
- Progradation
- Characterized by modifier
- Delta Dominated by River (Mississippi, litterally pushed out into ocean)
- High wave action (barrier islands)
- High tidal ranges (pushed back in leaving elongated bars)
- Aluvial Fans
Drainage Networks
- Basins vs Devides
- Drainage Patterns
- Landforms -> stream Terraces, incised meanders, etc.
- Base Level Concept (surface to which erosion is working), below accululation, above erosion
Geologic Time
October 11, 2006
Hutton -> Lyell + Steno
Uniformitarianism
Laws -> methodological
Process -> methological
Rate -> substantive
State -> Substantive
Methodological is right, substantive is wrong
Geopetals -> fossils, riple marks, etc
Original Continuity -> strata which are now seperate were originally together
Fossile content allows us todo corrilation
If things crosscut, then they are younger than what they crosscut (duh)
Flow has a vasicular texture on top
a sill has a bake zone on both top and bottom
Index Fossils -> good skelletons
Disconformity -> both erotion and sedement can produce one
Sequance statigraphy (how to subdevide rock record)
Diachroneity -> same thing two different times
When a basen subsides it sinks
Lithostratigraphy (formal naming of rocks based on their lithological units)
Uranium -> Lead dating
Argon -> Argon dating
Argon doesn’t agree with Uranium
Some fossils are Diachronous
Chemostratigraphy -> use of chemical marker for dating
Sed Rocks -Con’t
October 4, 2006
It takes 2 moles to weather ignious rocks, but only 1 mole is returned by the calcium carbonate. So silcate weathering consumes CO2
Lithification process
- Compaction
- Dissolution
- Precipatation
- Recrystalization
- Cementation
Facies Concept
- Unique to where a rock forms
- Sediment transported to shore line
- sand facies is very high energy
- finer grain caries through sand to mud
- very little carries out to the carbonate faces
- Sand stone to mud stone to lime stone
- Facies can only be ontop or below ajacent facies
- The order in which they’re array’d gives us the sea level history (transgression or Regression)
- Durring regression erotion takes place
Major depositional environments
- Weathering and erosion (proximal) -> source rock and climate
- Transportation and sedimentation (updip to fluvial) -> distance, gradient, energy level (lakes vs river)
- Shoarline (dunes)
- Deltas
- Deep Marine
- rate of sink matters
Eluvial system
- Fan (not clay because not enough time) basement stuff (felpars)
- Braided (broad and wide streams)
Eolian depositis ->
- fine grained (weathered by wind)
- between proximal and distal
- Dunes migrate ontop of eachother
Meandering streams
- Big and deep
- flood eluvial vally
- deposits silt and clay
- going down: High energy to low energy
Delta
- Sudden energy drop
- While global sealevel is rising, the mississippi is regressing because of sedemens
- Opposite gradiant: find to course grain due to regression
Reaf system
- Limestones and dolastones (from magnesium from lagoons)
- Both high and low energy (high from ocean, low from lagoon)
Turbidites
- Clay -> courser then back to cley suddenly
- Graded bedding
- Energy of the flow highest when it gets to the site
- head of flow is course tail is finer.
Important stuff that didn’t fit anywhere else
- Lacustrine Deposits: Varves
- Layering caused by lakes
- Diagenisis -> everything not metamorphic
- Basement = Igneous rocks
- felspar becomes clay, but it takes time
Metamorphic rocks -> represent changes that occer in solid state (prior to melting)
- Recrystalization
- Phase changes
- Neo Crystalization
- Pressure solution ->the contact (touching point) is desolved between grains
- Deformation -> contact is not desolved
- Tend to find them in Precambrian sheilds and occationally folded mountain belts (due to their tectonic activity)
- Temp, pressure, fluids
Lithosphere goes down into mantal to stenosphere
Igneous Rocks
September 27, 2006
Processes
- Start off in the mantel and move out
- Two kinds: intrusive and extrusive
- Intrusive are under the crust and take long to cool (big crystals)
- Extrusive are volcanic and cool quickly (course)
- All part of the rock cycle
- Magma and lava – Controls
- we can do phase diagrams, except we flip the y-axis to represent depth
- Sources of heat
- Radiogenic decay (biggest)
- Impacts (meteorites)
- Gravitational Compression
- Sinking of Fe Alloys
- Tidal Frication
- To tell heat under the surface we find pressure gradiant and temp at surface and use adiabate to determain heat at depth
- We can cacluate preasure from gravitation
- Two melting curves for dry and wet (weather they contain volitiles) effecting how it melts
- Due to shape of curves decompression of rising magma causes it to melt
- For main causes of differentiation (the different make ups of igneous rocks from minerals)
- Differences in magma sources
- Partial melting (gaining bouyancy)
- Country rock (picking up shit on the way up), breaks off in xenoliths and melts, or melts on the sides
- Fractional crystalization
- Differentiation tends to be a comparison between high in Fe, Mg (mafic and ultramafic from the mantal from #1-2) to high Si, Al (felsyc from #3-4)
- Geotherm veries, average of 30*K per km (60*K in a basalt)
- Minerals – Bowen’s reaction series (melting points of minerals) -> olivine is high quartz is low, Plaglioclase is both
- Texture -> Rapid cooling is Fine-grained (aphanitic), slow cooling is Coarse grained (phaneritic)
- Porphyritic is a combination of aphanitic and phaneritic
- Distribution of igneous rocks
- Plate techtonic decide spreading of igneous rocks (mafic) through decompression cooling at divergant margins
- Subduction pulls under contental plates (fasyc) also known as a convergant margin
- Basaltic volcanism can happen in the contenants due to sufrace composition
- Caldera = colapsed volcano
- Snake river plane in Yellow stone demonstraits the movement of plate techtonics (the place of the volcano keeps moving)
Minerals
September 25, 2006
Carbon Cycle con’t.
- Carbon Cycle interacts with not just atmosphere but ocean and earth levels.
- Caronate rock weathering -> CO2 is absorbed by the rock into ions in the ocean -> this CO2 is later returned
- Silcate rock weathering -> CO2 is absorbed by silcate rocks -> Only half of this CO2 is later returned
- Silicate rock weathering reduces
- Rock Cycle
- Magma comes up
- forms in the core: Intrusive
- forms at the surface: extrusive
- Weathered at the surface -> transported, deposited
- forms sediments
- Sediments are heated into metamorphic rock
- Magma comes up
- 3 kinds of rocks
- Igneous -> unorganized crystals
- crystal growth stopped by the growth of other crystals
- Sedimentary -> sandish
- Rounded (worn down) -> different sizes because of different levels?
- Metamorphic -> organized non-crystals
- flattened and uniform direction (perpendicular to the source of force)
- Igneous -> unorganized crystals
- Goldilocks Principle -> First three rules of heat/realistate -> CO2, CO2, CO2
- CO2 concentration is modulated
- Carbon cycles because earth has an active plate tectonic system
Minerals
- Interfacial angles are important
- Can have defined, specific, invariable chemical formula
- Can Have a range of possible chemical formula (Illite)
- Five different ways they form:
- One I missed
- Percipitate
- Solidsate fussion
- Bio mineralization -> animals secrete Calcite and Aragonite
- Fumeralic mineralization -> vulcanization
- Uhedral vs AnHedral (unlimited vs limited in growth)
- Bragg’s law = X-Ray Diffraction to determain crystal type
- crystals can have defects -> Steve Jacobson
- Compesition of the Core
- Meteorites
- Density Simulation
- High pressure density experiments
- Most abundant elements
- Whole earth: Fe, O Si, Mg (Ni, S, Al, Na, Ca, K)
- Surface: O, Si, Al, Fe, (Mg, Ca, K, Na)
- Major mineral groups
- Silicates (SiO4)-4
- Carbonates CaCO3
- Oxides Fe2O3
- Sulfides FeS2
- Halides NaCl
- Sulfates CaSO4
- Native elements Au, Ag, Cu
- Anionic classification (classified by anions)
- Silicates
- Shape
- Isolated tetraherdra (high melting points)
- Chains
- Sheets
- 3-D (low melting points)
- Ferromagnaesian (darker denser) vs NonFerromagnesian (lighter and less dense)
- Shape
- When you weather granite you produce:
- Quartz (in equilibrium) breaks up but stays intact as Quartz in beaches
- Feldspar (out of equilibrium) and degrades into clays
- Briditites comes up to form Basalt
- Granite comes up to form Sandstones and Clays
Overview
September 22, 2006
Scales of Measurement
Earth Systems
- Two engines
- Sun
- Core
- Plate techtonics
- heat wells up and is carried under contenants (subduction)
- Sun’s luminocity: gets hotter over time
- Old earth cold (look at mars)? No -> green house gasses (look at venus)
- CO2 removed from old atmosphere
- Goldilocks effect
- Earth’s interior
- Density control -> denser matter nearer to center (iron and metal oxide)
- Orbital characteristics
- Seasonality -> tilt in axis in rotation
- Atmosphere -> radiative effect (trapping infrared)
- Climate -> average temp = 15 *C (1*F at the equator = 12*F at the poles)
- Circulation
- two deep places of water near the poles
- Sea Ice formation -> denser (colder) water
- Internal Earth
- Heat
- Mantal convection
- Plate techtonics
- Rock Cycle
Earth System
- Open System ( energy and mass transfer)
- Reserviors
- Fluxes
- Residence times
- Origin -> observation of other systems in formation
- Inner (terrestrial) planets
- Outer (jovian) planets colder, gassier
- Collision of newly formed earth
- Radioactive decay heats interior
- 40K => 40Ca => 40AR
- Pangea
- Mountains across contenants
- fossils on different contenants
- Submarine warfair of ww2 = better understanding of plate techtonics
- Movement of plates determain placement of contenants
- Passive margin (easter US) vs Active margin (which causes subduction)
- Contenants pushed apart by plate techtonics and brought together by subduction
- Water moves perpendicular to the wind (creating the gulfstream effect)
- 1sv = 10^6 m^3/s
- Gulfstream heats europe
- 100ppm = 42% change of glaciars