First Le Reviewer
First Le Reviewer
GEOLOGY the study of the Earth and Earth’s interior, even the solar system and the universe
Aspects of Geology:
ASPECT OF TIME – different changes happening in the organisms and the environment (because
the Earth is divided into several geologic time scales)
ISSUE OF SCALE – using scales should be appropriate to your study (ex. micro-macro, small-large,
etc.) number that represents the printed distance compared to exact distance
COMPLEXITY – doing laboratory process in studying geology
1. PHYSICAL studying the composition and processes on the surface and beneath the
Earth
VOLCANOLOGY – study of volcanoes and volcanic eruptions
SEISMOLOGY – study of earthquakes and seismic activities
ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY – application of geologic concepts and principles to
solve environmental issues and its effects to human
ENGINEERING GEOLOGY – application of engineering projects; factoring in geologic
hazards and issues in constructions and operations
MINING GEOLOGY – study of mineral deposits
PETROLEUM GEOLOGY – study of oil deposits
MINERALOGY – study of minerals
PETROLOGY – study of rocks
GEOMORPHOLOGY – study of Earth’s surface and land formations
GEOPHYSICS – study of Earth especially on its magnetic field and gravitation
GEOCHEMISTRY – study of the Earth’s chemical compositions
PLANETARY GEOLOGY – study of planets and extraterrestial bodies
2. HISTORICAL studying the origin and development of Earth and universe through time
PALEONTOLOGY – study of fossils
STRATIGRAPHY – study of rock patterns
GEOCHRONOLOGY – study of geologic time scale
CATASTROPHISM a view where the Earth’s landscapes are shaped by sudden great
catastrophes (and these unknown causes no longer operate today)
Made by Baron Georges Cuvier; coined by William Whelhell
UNIFORMITARIANISM (by James Hutton) a view where physical, chemical, and biological
laws that operate today also operated in the past (to understand the present, we should
study what happened in the past) (ex. volcanic eruptions, climate change)
LESS FORCE + TIME BIGGER FORCE
LESSON 2: THE UNIVERSE AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM
Models of the Solar System: (AGE OF SOLAR SYSTEM: 13.7 BILLION YEARS OLD)
HELIOCENTRISM (Copernican Model by Nicolaus Copernicus) sun is the center of the solar
system
GEOCENTRISM (Ptolemaic Model by Ptolemy) Earth is the center of the solar system
1. BIG BANG THEORY the universe is formed from a point of “singularity” (explosion of space time)
extremely hot and dense plate explodes which expanded rapidly then slowly
while cooling
EVIDENCES:
1. Hubble’s Law (RED SHIFT) – by Edwin Hubble (1929); he discovered that the stars
are moving away from a certain reference point (it goes on a lower wavelength
where RED is a lower wavelength)
2. Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation – heat that is detected in the present
time which is due to the continuous expansion of the universe (ito daw yung hot and
dense plate na nadedetect sa mga planets)
3. Abundance of HYDROGEN and HELIUM – discovered that the planets and the stars,
especially the sun are composed of hydrogen and helium (which is a proof din daw
na nageexpand pa rin yung universe until now)
LIMITATIONS:
- It only explains the formation of the universe
- What was present before the Big Bang?
- How will it end? Will it ever end?
2. NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS the solar system came from a cloud of dust and gas particles called nebula
the nebula contracts then spins and slowly it cools down and started to form
bodies/ planets
MARS, VENUS, EARTH, MARS TERRESTIAL PLANETS; ROCKY PLANETS (composed of silicon, iron,
and oxygen); largely silicate rocks and metals that they tend to attarct to the center of
gravity
JUPITER, SATURN, URANUS, NEPTUNE GIANT/JOVIAN PLANETS; they are in gaseous or liquid in
form; composed of light elements (hydrogen, helium, argon, carbon, oxygen, nitrogen)
The Origin of the Moon a Mars-sized asteroid collided to the proto-Earth and the remnants of the
collision cooled down and became the satellite of the Earth now
LESSON 3: THE PLANET EARTH AND EARTH’S INTERIOR
PLANET EARTH (AGE: 4.6-4.5 BILLION YEARS OLD)
SHAPE: Oblate Spheroid
TILT: Around 21.5 to 24.5 degrees
ORBITAL SPEED: 30 km/s
CONTINENTS
o SHIELDS large stable areas of land that is composed of crystalline rocks
o STABLE PLATFORMS shields covered by sedimentary rocks
OCEAN BASINS
o CONTINENTAL SHELF portion of a continent that is submerged under an area of shallow
water known as shelf sea
o SUBMARINE CANYON submarine landslides
o MID-OCEAN RIDGE portion where oceanic crust are formed
OLDER BELTS – aged more than 100 million years old
YOUNGER BELTS – aged less than 100 million years old (nasa ring of Pacific Ocean
mga ito)
o CONTINENTAL SLOPE slope between continental shelf and the ocean floor
o ABYSSAL PLAIN underwater plain on the deep ocean floor
o GUYOT seamount with flat top
The Earth’s Interior
Nalaman nila ang earth’s layers through the seismic waves (S-Wave (solid) and P-Wave (solid and
liquid)
The Earth’s layers are classified because of these two tangible evidences:
o Ophiolites – exposure rocks of Earth that gives a hint of the crust (crust rocks)
o Xenoliths – foreign rocks from the mantle (volcanic products that gives mantle rocks
Layers of the Earth based on Chemical Layers of the Earth based on Physical
Property: Property:
1. CRUST outermost layer; composed of: oceanic 1. LITHOSPHERE crust and the uppermost mantle;
crust (basaltic, more dense, thin, younger, less silicon, solid but brittle
composed of iron) and continental crust (granatic,
less dense, thick, older, more silicon, composed of 2. ASTHENOSPHERE “plastic layer”; solid but mobile;
magnesium) weak layer resulting from temperature and pressure
changes
2. MANTLE thickest layer; rich in perovskite
(mineral) and peridotite (rock) 3. MESOSPHERE thickest layer; solid and rocky layer
3. CORE composed of iron and nickel alloy 4. OUTER CORE molten iron; 2900-5100 km in depth
ISOSTASY the concept of the model of the Earth wherein it is a concept of a floating lithosphere in
gravitational equilibrium with the Earth’s asthenosphere such that tectonic plates “float” at an elevation
that depends on thickness and density. (named by Clarence Edward Dutton)
Airy – Heiskanen model the density of the crust is the same throughout; elevation is directly
proportional to the depth of the crust
Pratt – Hayford model the volume of the crust is the same throughout; elevation is inversely
proportional to the density
LESSON 5: MINERALS
Minerals
N-ATURALLY OCCURING product of nature (walang synthetic processes na naganap)
I- NORGANIC walang carbon components ang minerals
H- OMOGENEOUS SOLIDS uniform in apperance because of its chemical composition
D- EFINITE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION has a unique chemical composition
o POLYMORPHISM – different minerals, same composition, different structure (ex. pyrite and
marcasite are both made of iron sulfide FeS2)
o ISOMORPHISM – different minerals, different composition, same structure (ex. halite (NaCl)
and pyrite (FeS2))
O- RDERED INTERNAL STRUCTURE crystalline atomic structures of minerals(all minerals are crystals
but not all crystals are minerals)
* MINERALLOIDS mineral-like substance which are either amorphous (does not demonstrate
crystallinity) or organic in nature (ex. pearl, obsidian)
Properties of Minerals
1. COLOR caused by absorption or reflection of various wavelengths of light (but unrealiable diagnostic
property of minerals)
IDIOCHROMATIC – observed as shades of one color
ALLOCHROMATIC – observed as various shades of color (ex. quartz)
2. STREAK color of minerals in powdered form and not necessarily identical to its color
Metallic minerals have dark colored streaks
Non-metallic minerals usually have white streaks
3. LUSTER ability of the minerals to reflect light
Metallic – shiny
Sub-metallic – medyo shiny
Vitreous – looks like a glass
Greasy – looks oily
Silky – looks like silk
Pearly – looks like pearl
Earthy- does not reflect light
Resinous – looks like amber (ex. sphalerite)
4. DIAPHENEITY or TRANSPARENCY how light transmission interacts with the surface of the minerals
OPAQUE TRANSLUCENT (ADAMANTINE) TRANSPARENT
5. HABIT shape and aggregates that a certain mineral is likely to form
6. MINERAL STRENGTH/HARDNESS resistance of minerals to sratch or abrasion
7. CLEAVAGE planes where chemical bonds are weak where a mineral would tend to break (planes
are repetitive or parallel, smooth, planar, and has unequal strength)
8. FRACTURE where chemical bonds are uniform in strength in all directions (ex. obsidian – conchordial
fractures or circular shaped fractures)
Types of Minerals
O, Si, Al, Fe, Ca, Mg, Na, K 8 elements that makes up the majority of the minerals
SILICATES (SiO4) makes up the most types of minerals and 90% of the crustal composition (silica-
oxygen tetrahedron – the unit-cell of silicate minerals)
TYPES OF NON-SILICATES:
o OXIDES either associated to or form many of the ores from which valuable metals can be
extracted (ex. hematite (brownish red color, brownish red streak, “specularite” metallic
variety), magnetite, corondum)
o SULFIDES associated to or form many of the economically important ores; opaque distinct
color (ex. pyrite and galena)
o SULFATES formed in evaporatic setting where highly saline water evaporates (ex. barite,
anyhydrite, gypsum)
o HALIDES commonly formed in evaporated setting (ex. fluorite, halite (NaCl))
o PHOSPHATES commonly found in living organisms (ex. apatite)
o CARBONATES abundant in marine environment; the mineral that comprises caves (ex.
calcite)
o NATIVE ELEMENTS single element minerals (ex. gold, silver)
Types of Magma
FELSIC INTERMEDIATE MAFIC ULTRAMAFIC
TYPES
(granatic) (andesitic) (basaltic) (picritic)
SILICA CONTENT
IRON,
MAGNESIUM
CONTENT
VISCOSITY
ERUPTIVE
BEHAVIOR
COMMONLY
continental crust continental crust oceanic crust upper mantle
FOUND IN
ASSIMILATION OF HOST ROCKS when molten body moves up through the “country” rocks and
dislodges (draws out) “foreign” rock fragments which then melts and is incorporated to the magma
body (natutuklap yung country rocks sa foreign rocks)
MAGMA MIXING (MAGMA MINGLING) a magma intrudes another magma that has different
composition (magma mixing to another magma; ito ang nagpa-trigger sa pagputok ng Mt.
Pinatubo)
FRACTIONAL CRYSTALLIZATION changing the composition of the melt as crystallization progress
(denser minerals goes to the bottom while less dense minerals goes to the top)
Volcanism phenomenon which magma is erupted in the surface through volcano as lava
Volcanic Explosivity Index relative measures of explosiveness of volcanic eruption based on: (1)
volume of the products, (2) height of eruptive cloud, and (3) frequency (gaano kadalas pumutok ang
bulkan)
Types of Volcanoes
ACCORDING TO THE DEGREE OF EXPLOSIVITY
o EXPLOSIVE (from felsic and intermediate magma) pyroclastic rocks, ash falls, pyroclastic
flows, debris avalanche
o NON-EXPLOSIVE (from mafic and ultramafic magma) lava flows, fractures, flow basalts
Philippine Volcanoes 24 ACTIVE VOLCANOES and MORE THAN 200 INACTIVE VOLCANOES (most