Geology-Reviewer-P PDF Lecture Notes
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Summary
These lecture notes provide a basic overview of geology, beginning with the formation of the universe and solar system and continuing into the different types of rocks. They feature the different branches of geology like physical, historical, and planetary geology, focusing on the processes and concepts involved.
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LECTURE 1: INTRODUCTION TO GEOLOGY Geology - study of earth - origin , history, composition, structures and physical properties - process that shape it - resources that could obtained Greek Meaning: - geo – earth - logos -- study Geology as a Discipline: 1. The relevance of time...
LECTURE 1: INTRODUCTION TO GEOLOGY Geology - study of earth - origin , history, composition, structures and physical properties - process that shape it - resources that could obtained Greek Meaning: - geo – earth - logos -- study Geology as a Discipline: 1. The relevance of time 2. The issue of scale 3. The complexity of replicating natural systems and phenomena in the laboratory Main Branches of Geology: 1. Physical Geology - deals with the materials that comprise the Earth and the processes that affect it a. Volcanology – study of volcanoes and volcanic activity b. Seismology – study of earthquakes and the mechanical properties of the earth c. Mineralogy – study of minerals and its properties d. Petrology – study of rocks and the conditions under which they are formed e. Geomorphology – study of landforms and the processes that shape them f. Geophysics – physics of the Earth and its environment in space g. Geochemistry – study of the chemical composition and processes of the Earth and other planets h. Planetary Geology – concerned with the geology of celestial bodies i. Environmental Geology – use of geologic information to manage our environment j. Engineering Geology – application of geologic information to engineering problems k. Mining Geology – Deals with the applications to mining l. Petroleum Geology – application of geology to the search of hydrocarbons 2. Historical Geology – study of the origin and evolution of the Earth through time a. Paleontology –study of prehistoric life as represented by fossils b. Stratigraphy – study of rock layers and layering (stratification) c. Geochronology – deals with the determination of the age of the Earth and its materials Basic Concepts in the history of Geology: 1. Catastrophism - Baron Georges Cuvier - worldwide catastrophes are the agents of change that alter the physical features of the Earth over time - widely accepted by theologians in the early 1800s due to similarity with Biblical events such as Noah’s Flood 2. Uniformitarianism - James Hutton - “The present is the key to the past.” - “The present is the key to the future.” - advocates the idea that the Earth is continuously modified by geologic processes that have always operated throughout time Geohazards – earth processes that cause life and property loss 1. Flooding 2. Earthquake 3. Volcanic Activity 4. Landslide 5. Mudflows Geologists at Work: 1. Relevance to daily life 2. Mineral Deposits 3. Resource Exploration LECTURE 2: THE PLANET EARTH Formation of the Universe: Big Bang Theory Formation of the Solar System: Nebular Hypothesis The Universe: Origin: Big Bang Theory - states that about 13.7 billion yrs. ago, all of the energy and matter compressed into an incomprehensibly hot and dense state - began to expand and cool hurling matter in all direction - proposed by the Belgian priest Georges Lemaître in the 1920s - Edwin Hubble justified Lemaître’s theory through observations that the Universe is continuously expanding; galaxies are moving away from each other The Solar System: Leftover from the Big Bang: sun, planets, satellites and rings, comets, and asteroids, meteoroids and dust COMPOSITION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM BY MASS Object Percentage of Mass Sun 99.85% Jupiter 0.10% All other planets 0.04% Comets 0.01% Satellites and rings 0.00% Asteroids 0.00% Meteoroids and dust 0.0000001% The Solar System: Origin: Nebular Hypothesis - proposed by Immanuel Kant and Pierre Simon de Laplace in the 18th century - Nebula – bodies of our solar system evolved from an enormous rotating cloud - starting 4.6 billion years ago, which contracted due to gravity - cloud of dust and dust (nebula) started to gravitationally collapse. - nebula contracted into a rotating disk due to gravity - repeated collisions caused the dust-size particles to coalesce into asteroid-size bodies - cooling caused rocky and metallic material to condense into tiny solid particles THE SOLAR SYSTEM Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars - - inner or terrestrial planets (nearest the sun) - rocky composition: largely silicate rocks and metals (Si, Fe, O) Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune - giant or Jovian planets (outer planets; far from the sun) - lack solid surfaces: in gaseous or liquid form - composition: light elements (H, He, Ar, C, O, Ni) Pluto - neither a terrestrial or Jovian planet - similar to the icy satellites of the Jovian planets Planets – scientists agreed that for a celestial body to qualify as a planet: a. it must be in orbit around the Sun b. it must be large enough that it takes on a nearly round shape; and c. it has cleared its orbit of other objects Earth – started as “dust ball” from the nebular gas and dust brought together by gravity (accretion) - heated (heating) and eventually segregated into layers (differentiation) as it cooled - when cooling set in, the denser elements (e.g., iron) sank while the lighter ones floated out into the surface, creating a differentiated Earth Layers of Earth: Discontinuities/Boundaries: 1. Mohorovicic – crust – mantle 2. Gutenberg – core – mantle 3. Lehmann – outer core – inner core Earth’s Vital Statistics: 1. Chemical Composition – 34.6% Iron, 29.5% Oxygen, 15.2% Silicon,12.7% Magnesium 2. Shape – flattened at the poles and bulging at the equator 3. Size – Earth’s circumference was first calculated by Eratosthenes Circumference = 360 degrees 800 km = 7 degrees 4. Equatorial Radius = 6378 km 5. Polar Radius = 6357 km 6. Equatorial Circumference = 40076 km 7. Polar Circumference = 40008 km Volume = 260,000,000,000 cu. miles 8. Density = 5.52 g/cm3 External Features of the Earth: Lithosphere – made up of moderately rigid plates (may consist of oceanic or continental lithosphere) – 7 major plates + several smaller plates Earth’s Large Scale Features: 1. Continents Continental Crust – Thick (30-60 km), old (250-4000 m.y.) and light - does not subduct - largest features: a. Mountain Belts – proposed by L. Kober as orogen in 1921 - Orogen – an extensive belt of rocks deformed by orogeny, associated in places with plutonic and metamorphic rocks - an episode of mountain building - such as the Andes, Alps, Himalaya, Urals, Appalachians, Caledonian, and NA Cordillera b. Cratons – kratos (greek) – strength - first proposed by L. Kober as kratogen in 1921 - old and stable interior part of the continent that has been relatively undisturbed - includes the shield which is free from sedimentary cover 2. Ocean Basins – thin - geologically young (