Title: CRUSTAL DEFORMATION
1CRUSTAL DEFORMATION
2Structural Geology study of the
architecture of the crust
.by examination of deformed
rocks DEFORMATION changes in location,
orientation, shape, volume results from
stresses that exceed rock strength
ductile (bends)
brittle (breaks)
same material (fence) deforms in different ways
from Davis and Reynolds, 1996
3TERMS
- FOLD a form of ductile strain in which rock
layers bend, usually as a result of compression - FAULT a break in a body of rock along which one
block slides relative to another - Strain Any change in the shape or volume of a
rock that results from stress
4rocks, like the fence, will deform in different
ways, depending upon the properties of the rock
and the nature of the applied stress
folds (ductile)
faults (brittle)
5macroscopic (map scale)
Keystone thrust (dark over light)
Waterpocket fold
left from Robert Varga, http//www.wooster.edu/g
eology/GEO313/Images/
right from http//dax.geo.arizona.edu/earthscope/
frontpage/images/ut18_lg.jpg
6mesoscopic (outcrop)
all from J. Waldron, http//www.stmarys.ca/academ
ic/science/geology/structural/
7TYPES OF FOLDS
- ANTICLINE a fold where the oldest rock is in the
center and is generally in an arch shape - SYNCLINE a fold where the youngest layer is in
the center and is generally in the shape of a
bowl (U) - MONOCLINE a fold where both limbs are horizontal
8Folds
- fold bends or wave-like features in layered rock
- anticline an upward arching fold
- hinge line the axis of the fold
- syncline a downward-arching counterpart of an
anticline - axial plane a plane containing all of the hinge
lines of a fold
9Plunging Folds
- plunging folds folds in which the hinge lines
are not horizontal
Plunging folds anticline on left and right,
syncline in center. The hinge lines are at an
angle to the block diagram, penetrating
the surface and emerging from the front cross
section
10Convergent Plate Boundaries and Folding
Continent-Continent collision forms Folded
Mountain BeltAlps, Himalayans, Appalachians
Ocean-Ocean collision forms Island Arc
Japan, Aleutians, Cent. Am.
11Folded Rock Before Erosion
12Folded Rock After Erosion
Eroded Anticline, older rocks in center. Syncline
is opposite.
13Structural Domes and Structural Basins
- structural dome a structure in which the beds
dip away from a central point - structural basin a structure in which the beds
dip toward a central point
Structural basin
Structural dome
14the two limbs of this fold have the same strike
but different dips
cross-section
15Folded Rocks (Dorset, England)Center has
overturned area
Older
Overturned Area
Younger
Lucky we have ways of recognizing right side
up What are they?
Source Tom Bean
Older
Younger
16Anticlines and Oil
Early USA petroleum exploration, e.g.
Pennsylvania anticlines
17TYPES OF FAULTS
- NORMAL a fault where the hanging wall moves
downward relative to the foot wall pulled apart
by tension at divergent boundaries - REVERSE where compression causes the hanging
wall to move upward with respect to the foot wall
at convergent boundaries - STRIKE-SLIP the rock on either side of the fault
slides horizontally in response to shear stress
at transform fault boundaries
18Faults
- dip-slip fault movement is parallel to the dip
of the fault surface - strike-slip fault horizontal motion parallel to
the strike of the fault surface - oblique-slip fault both strike-slip and dip-slip
components
19Dip-Slip Faults
- footwall the underlying surface of an inclined
fault plane - hanging wall the overlying surface of an
inclined fault plane
20Dip-Slip Faults (cont.)
- normal fault a fault where the hanging-wall
block has moved downward relative to the footwall
block - graben when a block bounded by normal faults
drops down - horst when a block bounded by normal faults is
uplifted
21Dip-Slip Faults (cont.)
- reverse fault when the hanging-wall block has
moved upward relative to the footwall block - thrust fault a reverse fault in which the dip of
the fault plane is at a low angle to horizontal
A reverse fault. The fault is unaffected by
erosion. Arrows indicate compressive stress.
Diagram shows area after erosion dashed lines
indicate portion eroded away
Thrust fault due to horizontal compression.
22Strike-slip Faults
- strike-slip fault a fault where the movement is
predominantly horizontal and parallel to the
strike of the fault - right-lateral fault a strike-slip fault in which
the block seen across the fault appears displaced
to the right - left-lateral fault a strike-slip fault in which
the block seen across the fault appears displaced
to the left
23Dip-Slip Faults
Demo Cardboard Models
24Reverse Fault (called Thrust Fault if shallow
angle)
Typical of convergent margins
(Hanging wall Up)
Structural Geology is taught by Dr. Krall
This guy is rich
Younger
What phase of magma fractionation would result in
the placement of this ore body? Which formed
first, the ore body or the fault? What common
mineral is mostly likely in the ore body?
Miners pay geologists to find their lost
orebody One friend earned enough to buy a house
This poor guy is out of luck
25Normal Fault Hanging Wall Down
Foot wall under the fault plane
Hanging wall overhangs the fault plane
Key Bed
Source John S. Shelton
Especially common in divergent margins
26Faults and Oil
27TERMS
- STRESS The amount of force exerted on a unit of
rock - ISOTASY a condition of gravitational and buoyant
equilibrium between the earths Lithosphere and
the Athenosphere - Deformation the bending, tilting and breaking of
the Earths crust
28importance of stress and strain
stress is the force applied and strain is the
deformation that results
stress is instantaneous and only exists when
applied strain is permanent change in a rock
29TYPES OF STRESS
- Compression the type of stress that squeezes and
shortens, commonly reduces the volume of the rock - Tension stress that stretches and pulls the rock
layer apart - Shear stress that distorts a body by pushing
parts of the body in opposite directions
30Stress-Strain
31Compression, Tension, and Shearing Stress
Convergent Divergent Transform
32Shear stress and strain