Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 12

Structural Geology

GLY 4400 Lecture 1 Introduction

What is Structural Geology?


Structural Geology is the branch of geology that deals with the form, arrangement, and internal structure of the rocks, and especially with the description, representation, and analysis of structures, chiefly on a moderate to small scale Similar to tectonics, but the latter term is used for broader regional or historical structures
2

Geologic Structure
A geometric feature in rock whose shape, form, and distribution can be described

Geometrical Classification
A. Planar to subplanar B. Curviplanar C. Linear

Geological Significance Classification


A. Primary - Formed by the formation of the rock itself B. Local gravity-driven - formed due to slip down an inclined surface - Includes: Slumping, at any scale, driven by gravitational potential which exceeds friction C. Local density-inversion driven - formed because of local lateral rock-density variations, causing local buoyancy forces D. Fluid-driven pressure: Injection of unconsolidated material due to sudden release of pressure E. Tectonic - Formed due to interactions between lithospheric plates, or regional interactions between the asthenosphere and the lithosphere. The forces are gravitational, trying to achieve isostatic equilibrium, at crustal to lithospheric scales 5

Time of Formation Classification


A. Syn-formational - Structure forms at the same time as the material that forms the rock B. Penecontemporaneous - Formed after deposition, but before full lithification C. Post-formational - Structure forms after the rock has fully formed, as a consequence of forces not related to the formation of the rock

Debris Flow

Flowing mixture is dominantly sediment


7

Formation Process Classification


A. Fracturing - related to development or coalescence of fractures in rock B. Frictional sliding - The slippage of one rock past another, or of grains past each other, resisted by frictional forces C. Plasticity - Deformation by the internal flow of crystals w/o loss of cohesion, or non-frictional sliding of crystals past each other D. Diffusion - material transport either in the solid-state or by dissolution in a fluid
8

Mesoscopic Cohesion Classification


A. Brittle - loss of cohesion across a mesoscopically discrete surface B. Ductile - w/o loss of cohesion across a mesoscopically discrete surface C. Brittle/ductile - some combination of the two behaviors

Significance of Strain Classification


A. Contractional - Shortening of a region B. Extensional - Lengthening (extension) of a region C. Strike-slip - movement w/o dimensional change

10

Distribution of Deformation Classification


A. Continuous - deformation throughout the rock body, on all scales B. Penetrative - At the scale of observation, occurs throughout the rock body - at finer scales, there may be gaps between structures C. Localized - Continuous or penetrative throughout a definable subregion of the overall structure D. Discrete - a structure which occurs as an isolated feature
11

Plate Tectonic Features

Figure 1.4 in text


12

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi