HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS...

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HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller

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Telling Rocks Apart zHow geologists tell apart different minerals and rocks ycolor, luster, texture yhardness test xscratching one against another diamond is hardest yacid test xusing weak hydrochloric acid to ystreak test xform a streak across a ceramic tile

Transcript of HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS...

Page 1: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

HNRS 228 AstrobiologyChap.4 Geology Bennett et al.

Lecture Notes for Chapter 4(mostly from HNRS 227)Prof. Geller

Page 2: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

The Geological HistoryReading the Earth’s history in the rocks

Rocks and fossils Relative and absolute dating methods

Formation of the Earth Accretion, differentiation, Moon, age

The Hadean EarthPlate TectonicsClimateGeology and life

Page 3: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Telling Rocks ApartHow geologists tell apart different

minerals and rocks color, luster, texture hardness test

scratching one against another• diamond is hardest

acid testusing weak hydrochloric acid to

streak testform a streak across a ceramic tile

Page 4: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Minerals(see Table 19.1)Characteristics

naturally occurring inorganic definite crystalline structure

The natural resources of industry

Page 5: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Igneous Rocks

“Rocks formed from hot molten mass of melted rock material”

Page 6: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Sedimentary Rocks

“Rocks formed from particles or dissolved materials from previously existing rocks.”

Page 7: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Metamorphic Rocks

“Previously existing rocks that have been changed by heat, pressure, or hot solutions into a distinctly different rock.”

Page 8: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

The Rock Cycle

Page 9: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Earth’s Interior andHow We Know It

Page 10: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Earthquakes Galore

Page 11: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Earth’s Inside Story

Page 12: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Crustal Rumblings

Page 13: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Plate Tectonics“The theory that the Earth’s crust is

made of rigid plates that float on the asthenosphere.”

Consider the scientific evidence for plate tectonics and what forced scientists to accept the theory as fact

Page 14: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Fossils across an ocean

Page 15: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Boundaries Galore

Page 16: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Plates are smashing

Page 17: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Surface Building ProcessesStress

“stress is a force that tends to compress, pull apart, or deform”

different types of stresscompressive stresstensional stressshear stress

Strain “the adjustment to stress”

Page 18: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Stress and Strain

Page 19: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Surface Building Processes

Folds bends in

layered bedrockAnticline /\

Syncline \/

Page 20: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Surface Building ProcessesFaulting

formation of a crack caused by relative movement of rock on either side of a fracturedifferent types - normal, reverse, thrust

Page 21: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Earthquakes Defined as

“quaking, shaking, vibrating, or upheaval of the ground”

Earthquake causes elastic rebound

theory Intensity measure

Richter Magnitude not linear

Page 22: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Mountains“elevated parts

of the Earth’s crust that rise abruptly above the surrounding surface”

Causes folding, faulting,

volcanic activity

Page 23: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Volcanoes“hill or mountain formed by the extrusion of lava

or rock fragments from magma below”Different types

shield, cinder cone, composite (composite shown)

Page 24: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Tear-Down ProcessesWeathering

mechanical weathering chemical weathering

Erosion mass movement (mass wasting) running water (floodplain, delta) glacier wind (deflation and abrasion) impact cratering

Page 25: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Development of Geologic TimeFossilization“Reading the Rocks”

principle of uniformity principle of original horizontality principle of superposition principle of crosscutting relationships principle of faunal succession radiometric dating

Geologic Time Scale

Page 26: HNRS 228 Astrobiology Chap.4 Geology Bennett et al. Lecture Notes for Chapter 4 (mostly from HNRS 227) Prof. Geller.

Geologic Time Scale