Ipinapakita ang mga post na may etiketa na Physical Geology. Ipakita ang lahat ng mga post
Ipinapakita ang mga post na may etiketa na Physical Geology. Ipakita ang lahat ng mga post

Lunes, Nobyembre 13, 2017

Glaciers and glaciation.

:-) innovation: food geology

70% of the world's fresh water in held in glaciers

Running water is mostly responsible for shaping Earth's land surface.

Glaciers are far more effective agents of erosion, transportation, and deposition.

Ice Age glaciation

nondescript valley

Paleozoic glacial age

A glacier is a large, long-lasting mass of ice, formed on land, that moves under it's own weight. It develops as snow is compacted and crystallized. Glaciers can develop any place where, over period of years, more snow accumulates that what melts away or what is lost.

Are there types of glaciers? If so, what are they?

These are the types of glaciated terrain on Earth's surface.

1. Alpine glaciers is found in mountainous regions.
2. Continental glaciers exists where a large part of a continent is covered by glacial ice.

Types of Glaciers

1. Valley glacier - valley, high to low elevation, prevalent in areas of alpine glaciation
2. a. Ice sheet - covers a large area of mass, continental glaciation, Greenland and Antarctica
    b. Ice cap - smaller ice sheet
Both flows downward and outward from a central high point. Like a negative lava.

1/10th of land surface are covered by glaciers

1/3rd peak during glacial ages

Where are the glaciers?

85% Antarctic melt: 65 m (213 ft) rise
10% Greenland
5% others (freshwater)

How do glaciers form?

Just a process of compaction and crystallization.

It starts with a single snowflake. Snowflakes pile up they form a granular flow, glue multiple granular flow you get a firn, it's basically a snowball, then pile up a bunch of snowballs, you get a glacier ice.

Ablation is ice flow just as chocolate melts.

Sublimation is a process in which ice evaporates directly to the atmosphere.

Calve is ice break off. A divorce of ice.

Glacial Budgets

+ positive expand = advancing glaciers
- negative shrinks = receding glaciers
_ balanced budget

Zone of accumulation - up G
Zone of ablation - down G
-ice is ablated, evaporated, melted, called
Equilibrium line - snow line, firn line, boundary line

Terminus - lower edge of a glacier
* valley glacier
+ T down
-  T up

However, an advancing glacier doesn't mean it's getting colder, it just means that it's getting wetter, more precipitation is falling during the winter months, or the summers are cloudy, that means reducing the warmth of sunlight passing through.

5°C lowering will mean new ice age

How do glaciers move?

Less than few mm to 15 m in a day

Even glacier gradient has the thickest near equilibrium line.

Fastest moving ice near equilibrium line.
Slow after  E.L.

Faster in temperate climate than colder ones.

Surface moves faster than base.

Basal sliding is the sliding of the glacier as a single body over the underlying rock. Just like melting ice cream placed on a surface.

Plastic flow - movement of ice grains which they slide past one another though both grains move at the same time as one body.

Rigid zone - rigid movement, ice grains move as one though still aligned with the adjacent ice grains.

Crevasses - open fissure, develop also in curve path

Outlet glaciers - where mountain ranges are higher than the ice sheet, the ice sheet flows between mountains as valley glaciers

Ice streams - faster movement than in adjoining ice, which is frozen to it's bed, like a corpse

Glacial Erosion

Plucking - water will percolate to the rock cleavage then it will freeze again, and as the glacier move, it breaks and erode the rock underneath, more like a nose pack for rocks

Faceted - a surface formed through ablation

Striated - scratched

Rock flour - rock to rock grinding

Glacial Valleys

U-shaped valley, glacial erosion

V-shaped valley, stream erosion

Hanging valleys - higher than main valley, a toilet bowl sliced by a samurai

Truncated spurs - ridges with triangular facets produced by glacial erosion at lower ends

Cirque - steep-sided, half-bowl-shaped recess carved into a mountain at the head of a valley carved by a glacier, a half-eaten cupcake

Horn - sharp peak that remains

Aretes - sharp ridges, separate adjacent glacially carved valleys

Glacial Deposition

Till - the unsorted and unlayered rock debris carried or deposited by a glacier

Erratic - ice-transported boulder that has not been derived from underlying bedrock, wandering rock

Moraines - the till that occurs as a body of unsorted and unlayered debris either on the glacier itself, or what has been left by the glacier, think of a giant glacier worm devouring rock debris and excrete it as it moves, the poop is the moraine

Medial moraine - adjacent lateral moraine join and carried as a long ridge of till

End moraine - a ridge of till that piles up along the front edge of the ice, crescent-shaped or horshoe-shaped

A. Terminal moraine - end moraine marking the farthest advance of a glacier

B. Recessional moraine - end moraine built while terminus of a receding glacier remains temporarily stationary

Ground moraine - thin blanket of till

Drumlins - bodies of till shaped into streamlined hills, shaped like an inverted spoon

Outwash - material deposited by the debris-laden meltwater

Esker - an outwash feature of unusual shape associated with former ice sheets and some very large valley glaciers; a long, sinuous ridge of water-deposited sediment, pronounced: esssker, serpent kame

Kettle - it is formed when the ice block finally melts

Kame - low mound or irregular ridge formed or outwash deposits of stagnating glacier

Kame and kettle topography

Varve - two layers of sediment representing one year's deposition in a lake

Pluvial lakes - formed in a period of abundant rainfall

Fiord - a coastal inlet that is drowned glacially carved valley

Tillite - lithified till










Miyerkules, Oktubre 18, 2017

Time and Geology

novella:
http://highered.mheducation.com/novella/SITELIBDisplay.jsp?mode=SEM&catId=903

10th ed:
http://highered.mheducation.com/sites/007252815x/student_view0/chapter10/multiple_choice_quiz.html

14th ed:
http://highered.mheducation.com/sites/0073369381/student_view0/chapter10/multiple_choice_quiz.html


The Key to the Past

Relative Time
     Principles Used to Determine Relative Age
     Unconformities
     Correlation The Standard Geologic Time Scale

Numerical Age
     Isotopic Dating
     Uses of Isotopic Dating

Combining Relative and Numerical Ages

Age of the Earth
     Comprehending Geologic Time

***

What is the difference between the relative age and numerical age?

How to determine the sequence of geologic events? Through dating!
What are the relative dating principles?

How do fossils are used to determine relative age?
How paleontology contributed to the development of the geologic time scale?

What is radioactive decay?
How do radiogenic isotopes can be used to determine numerical age?

What is the age of the Earth?
What is the Earth's major subdivision of geologic time?

***

James Hutton  father of geology

 Charles Lyell Principles of Geology Charles Darwin

The concept that geologic processes operating at present are the same processes that operated in the past eventually became known as the principle of uniformitarianism. Basically, history repeats itself.

 The term actualism comes closer to conveying the principle that the same processes and natural laws that operated in the past are those we can actually observe or infer from observation as operating at present. History gives birth to Present.

 Under present usage, uniformitarianism has the same meaning as actualism for most geologists.

numerical age (also known as absolute age )—age given in years or some other unit of time;
e.g. Dec. 10, 1997

 relative time the sequence in which events took place, rather than the number of years involved
e.g. I am born two weeks before Christmas a week after Bonifacio Day.

***

 Contacts are the surfaces separating two different rock types or rocks of different ages.

 Formations are bodies of rock of considerable thickness with recognizable characteristics that make each distinguishable from adjacent rock units.

 The subdiscipline of geology that uses interrelationships between layered rock (mostly) or sediment to interpret the history of an area or region is known as stratigraphy (from the Latin word stratum, meaning a thing spread out, or a cover).

The principle of original horizontality states that beds of sediment deposited in water formed as horizontal or nearly horizontal layers.

The principle of superposition states that within a sequence of undisturbed sedimentary or volcanic rocks, the oldest layer is at the bottom and layers are progressively younger upward in the stack.

The principle of lateral continuity states that an original sedimentary layer extends laterally until it tapers or thins at its edges.

 The principle of crosscutting relationships states that a disrupted pattern is older than the cause of disruption. s. The sedimentary beds on either side of the valley appear to have been sliced off, or truncated, by the valley.

 Feature Is Younger Than But Older Than

 Valley (canyon) < Skinner Gulch Limestone
 Foster City Formation < Dike > Hamlinville Formation
Dike < Larsonton Formation > Foster City Formation
 Larsonton Formation < Leet Junction Formation and granite >Dike
Granite < Tarburg Formation >Larsonton Formation

contact metamorphosed (think “seared” or “baked”)

The principle of inclusion states that fragments included in a host rock are older than the host rock.

An unconformity is a surface (or contact) that represents a gap in the geologic record, with the rock unit immediately above the contact being considerably younger than the rock beneath.

An angular unconformity is a contact in which younger strata overlie an erosion surface on tilted or folded layered rock.

A nonconformity is a contact in which an erosion surface on plutonic or metamorphic rock has been covered by younger sedimentary or volcanic rock.

In geology, correlation usually means determining time equivalency of rock units.

Finding physical continuity —that is, being able to trace physically the course of a rock unit—is one way to correlate rocks between two different places.

***

Update: SO I PLANNED TO RESUME WRITING THE REMAINING NOTES HERE BUT I WAS REMINDED BY THE LESSONS OF THE BHAGAVAD GITA TO BE IN THE PRESENT.

Which it the right way because this important but as humans we should be in the moment with the current occupations in our life not otherwise. So bye.