SCI-405 GEOLOGY Reviewer
SCI-405 GEOLOGY Reviewer
THE UNIVERSE, THE SOLAR SYSTEM, AND THE PLANET • Predominantly gaseous, no solid surface
EARTH • Low density
• Faster rotation, strong magnetic fields
Age of the Earth – 4.54 billion years ago (4.6 ga) • Many moons, many rings
Age of the Sun – 4.54 billion years ago
Age of the formation of the Philippines – 50 million years 1. Jupiter
Asteroid – causes the extinction of life. 2. Saturn
Age of the Universe – 13.77 billion years ago 3. Uranus
4. Neptune
UNIVERSE
• Mostly composed of hydrogen Sun - one star in the solar system; yellow dwarf star
• Heavier elements were fused (nuclear fusion) within the Metrocella star – oldest star (±800 𝑚𝑖𝑙𝑙𝑖𝑜𝑛 star)
bowels of stars. Sirius – also known as the Alpha Canis Majoris or the Dog star; the
brightest star.
BIG BANG THEORY Galaxy – huge collection of gas, dust, and billions of stars and their
• Proposed by Georges Lemaitre (1920’s) solar systems. Milky Way is our galaxy.
• Today’s best model
• Hypothesis of the primeval atom International Astronomical Union – a union or non-governmental
• Prevailing cosmological model that explains the early organization that studies astronomy; founded in 1919.
development of the Universe: The Universe was once in an
extremely hot and dense state which expanded rapidly.
• Edwin Hubble justified Lemaitre’s theory through THE PLANET EARTH
observations that the Universe is continuously expanding Vital Statistics of the Earth
(galaxies are moving away from each other). He also • Equatorial Radius: 6378 km
proposed the red shift doppler effect; Doppler Effect – red • Polar Radius: 6357 km
shift (the object is moving away) and blue shift (the object • Equatorial Circumference: 40 076 km
is moving closer). • Polar Circumference: 40 008 km
• Volume: 260 000 000 000 cubic miles
NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS • Density: 5.52 g/cm^3
• Rotating gas-dust cloud began to contract due to gravity.
Most of the mass became concentrated at the center Earth’s circumference was first calculated by Eratosthenes.
forming the Sun.
• Proposed by Immanuel Kant and Pierre Simon de Laplace Shape: Oblate spheroid
in the 18th century, together with Emmanuel Swedenborg. Composition: iron (32.1%), oxygen (30.1%), silicon (15.1%),
• Remaining matter condensed to form the planets: terrestrial magnesium (13.9%), sulfur (2.9%), nickel (1.8%), calcium (1.5%), and
and jovian planets. aluminum (1.4%); trace (1.2%).
• Composition: silica, alumina, lime, iron oxide, magnesia, and biological law that operate today also operated in the past” which
titanium oxide, sodium oxide forces and processes shaping our planet today have been at work for
a very long time. To understand ancient rocks, we must first
Theory about the Moon understand present-day processes and their result – “the present is
1. Fission theory – the Earth was spinning extremely fast, the key to the past”. He also argued that forces that appear small
and part of the planet was ripped apart to form moon. could, over long span of time, produce effects just as great as those
2. Capture theory – the moon has formed somewhere in the resulting from sudden catastrophic events. For example, he argued
solar system but was captured by the Earth’s gravitational that mountains are sculpted and ultimately destroyed by weathering
force when it flew close to the planet. and the work of running water, and that their wasted are carried to the
3. Condensation theory – the Earth and Moon condensed at ocean by processes that can be observed.
the same time from the nebula.
4. Giant Impact theory – sometimes called the Colliding or GEOLOGIC TIME
Ejected Ring Theory wherein the Earth was hit by 1896 – Radioactivity was discovered.
something huge (Theia) and a piece of Earth was ejected 1905 – First attempt to use radioactivity for dating.
to the space, started orbiting then formed the Moon. (Dinosaurs died out about 65million years ago, and age of Earth is
about 4.6 billion year)
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION TO GEOLOGY
THE MAGNITUDE OF GEOLOGIC TIME
Geology • 90 years old someone is very old.
• Greek word “Geos” means Earth and “logos” means • 1000 years old artifact is ancient.
“Discourse”. • In geology,
• Science of solid Earth o When a geologic event occurred 100 million
• the science that pursues an understanding of planet Earth. years ago – Recent and a rock sample that has
been dated at 10 million years may be called –
TWO MAIN DIVISIONS Young.
• Physical Geology – Examines the materials composing
Earth and seeks to understand the many processes that RELATIVE DATING AND THE GEOLOGIC TIMESCALE
operate beneath and upon its surface. • 19th Century – Geologic times scale was developed using
• Historical Geology – Is to understand the origin of Earth principles of relative dating.
and its development through time and thus, strives to • Relative Dating – means that events are placed in their
establish a chronological arrangement of the multitude proper sequence or order without knowing their age in
physical and biological changes that have occurred in the years.
geologic past. • Law of Superposition – rule applies to materials that were
originally deposited at Earth’s surface, such as layers of
DIFFERENT AREAS OF GEOLOGIC STUDY sedimentary rock and volcanic lava flows. States that “The
• Archaeological Geology youngest layer is on top, and the oldest layer is on the
• Biogeosciences bottom” if nothing has turned the layers upside down.
• Engineering Geology
• Forensic Geology PRINCIPLE OF FOSSIL SUCCESSION OR FAUNAL
• Geochemistry SUCCESSION
• Geomorphology Fossil organisms succeed one another in a definite and
• Geophysics determinable order and therefore any time can be recognized by its
fossil content.
• Historical Geology
• Fossil are the remains or traces of prehistoric life.
• Hydrogeology
• Medical Geology
• Mineralogy
• Ocean Sciences
• Paleoclimatology
• Paleontology
• Petrology
• Planetary Geology
• Sedimentary Geology
• Seismology
• Structural Geology
• Tectonics
• Volcanology
CATASTROPHISM
James Ussher, Anglican Archbishop, Ireland. In the mid-
1600’s published a major work and suggested that Earth was only a
few thousand years old created in 4004 BC. During 17 th and 18th
centuries Catastrophism influenced people’s thinking and believed
that “Earth’s landscapes had been shaped primarily by great
catastrophes. Features such as mountains and canyons, which today
we know take great periods of time to form, were explained as having
been produced by sudden and often worldwide disasters produced by
unknown causes that no longer operate”. THE NATURE OF SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY
• Hypothesis – a tentative (or untested) explanation
THE BIRTH OF MODERN GEOLOGY • Theory – a well-tested and widely accepted views that
James Hutton (Scottish physician and farmer) – Published scientific community agrees best explains certain
“Theory of the Earth” in 1795. Put forth for the fundamental principle observable facts.
a pillar of geology today: Uniformitarianism – “Physical, chemical,
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• Materials such as Iron and Nickel and the elements of which • Rocks of the lithosphere get progressively hotter and
the rock-forming minerals are composed – Silicon, Calcium, weaker (more easily deformed) with increasing depth.
Sodium, and so forth – • At the uppermost asthenosphere, the rocks are close
formed metallic and rocky enough to their melting temperature that they deformed
clumps that orbited the very easily.
Sun.
• Repeated Collisions 2. The Lower Mantle
caused these masses to ▪ Depth of 660 km (410mi) to the top of the core, at a depth of
coalesce into larger 2900 km (1800mi).
asteroid size bodies called
Planetesimal. EARTH’S CORE
• Inner Planets: Mercury, • Composition of the core is thought to be Iron-Nickel alloy
Venus, Earth, and Mars with minor amount of oxygen, silicon, and sulfur-
(Terrestrial Planets) elements that readily form compounds with iron.
• Lighter elements were • The Iron rich material has an average density of nearly 11
eventually whisked by the g/cm3 and approaches 14 times the density of water at
Solar Winds from the Earth’s center.
inner solar system to the • Divided into two regions that exhibits very different
outer solar system. mechanical strengths:
• Outer Planets: Jupiter, o Outer Core – the liquid layer 2270 km (1410mi)
Saturn, Uranus, and thick, this zone generates the Earth’s magnetic
Neptune (Gas Giants field.
Planets, Jovian Planets) o Inner core – a sphere having a radius of 1216
which contained high km (756 mi) termed as solid core due to its
percentage of ices-water, immense pressure that exist in the center of the
carbon dioxide, ammonia, planet.
and methane as well as
rocky and metallic debris. THE FACE OF EARTH
• Meteorites – when they • Continental elevation of about 0.8 km (0.5 mi)
survive an impact with • Ocean Floor is about 3.8 km (2.4 mi) below sea-level.
Earth. • The thicker and less dense continental crust is more
buoyant than the oceanic crust.
LIGHT-YEAR
• is a unit for measuring distances to stars. MAJOR FEATURES OF THE CONTINENTS
• One Light-year is the distance light travels in one year- Largest feature of the continents can be distinguished by two distinct
about 9.5 trillion km (5.8 trillion mi). categories:
1. Extensive, flat stable areas that have been eroded nearly to sea
FORMATION OF EARTH’S LAYERED STRUCTURE level.
Continental Crust formed gradually over the last 4 billion 2. Uplifted regions of deformed rocks that make up present-day
year. (Oldest rocks yet discovered are isolated fragments found in the mountain belts.
Northwest Territories of Canada with dates about 4 billion years.)
Mountain Belts – most prominent topographic features of the
EARTH’S INTERNAL STRUCTURE continents are linear mountain belts. When the youngest mountains
are considered (those less than 100 million years old – located
EARTH’S CRUST primarily in two major zones.
• The Crust – earth’s relatively thin, rocky outer skin, is of ▪ The circum-Pacific belt (the region surrounding the Pacific
two different types – Continental Crust and Oceanic Crust. Ocean).
o Oceanic Crust – roughly 7 kilometers (5 miles) ▪ Island Arcs are active mountainous regions composed largely of
thick and composed of dark igneous rock basalt. volcanic rocks and deformed sedimentary rocks.
o Continental Crust – averages about 35
kilometers (22 miles) thick but may exceed 70 MAJOR FEATURES OF THE OCEAN BASINS
kilometer (40mi) and average composition of They are defined by three major regions: continental margins, deep
granitic rock called granodiorite. ocean basins, and oceanic (mid-ocean) ridges.
• Continental Rocks have an average density of about 2.7
g/cm3 and ages about 4 billion years old. Continental Margins – is the portion of the seafloor adjacent to the
• Oceanic Crust are younger (180million years or less) and major landmasses.
denser about 3.0 g/cm3. It includes:
• Continental Shelf – gently sloping platform which extends
EARTH’S MANTLE seaward from the shore and considered a flooded
• 82% of Earth’s volume is contained in the Mantle. extension of the continents.
• Nearly 2900 kilometers (1800 mi) • Continental Slope – the boundary between the continents
• The Uppermost mantle is peridotite, richer in the metals and the deep-ocean basins, with relatively steep drop-off
of magnesium and iron. that extends from the outer edge of the continental shelf to
the floor of the deep ocean.
1. The Upper Mantle • Continental Rise – more gradual incline that consist of a
▪ Extends from the crust-mantle boundary down to a depth of thick accumulation of sediments that moved downslope
about 660 kilometers (410 miles) from the continental shelf to the deep-ocean floor.
▪ Divided into two different parts:
• The top portion of the upper mantle is part of the stiff Deep-Ocean Basins – between the continental margins and oceanic
Lithosphere, and beneath that is the weaker ridges.
Asthenosphere. Consists of:
• The Lithosphere (sphere of rock) consist of the entire • Abyssal Plains – consists of incredibly flat feature.
crust and uppermost mantle and forms Earth’s relatively • Deep-Ocean Trenches – are relatively narrow and
cool, rigid outer shell. Averages about 100 kilometers in represent only a small fraction of the ocean floor, some
thickness more than ~250 kilometer. trenches are adjacent to young mountains that flank the
• Asthenosphere (“weak sphere”) weak layer continents, while other trenches parallel linear island chains
• Top portion of the asthenosphere has temp and press called Volcanic Island Arcs.
regime resulting in small amount of melting.
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• Seamounts – are dotting ocean floor that are submerged ▪ San Andreas Fault of California and the Alpine Fault of New
volcanic structures form aa long narrow chains. Volcanic Zealand.
activity has also produced several large Lava Plateaus.
Changing Boundaries
Oceanic Ridges (Mid-Ocean Ridge) – the most prominent feature ▪ Pacific Plate would close completely in 300 million years.
on the ocean floor that are broadly elevated feature forms a
continuous belt that winds for more than 70,000km (43,000mi) around
the globe in a manner like the seam of a baseball and consisting of
highly deformed rocks.
DYNAMIC EARTH
• Brief Introduction to the Theory of Plate Tectonics
• In the Early part of the 20th Century with the radical proposal
of continental Drift- the idea that continents move about the
face of the planet. Which contradicted the long-established
view that continents and ocean basins are permanent and
stationary features on the face of Earth.
• 50 years passed the Theory of Plate Tectonics was
proposed that provided the first comprehensive model of
Earth’s internal workings.
• According to the plate tectonics model: Earth’s rigid outer
shell (lithosphere) is broken into numerous slabs called
lithospheric plates or Plates.
PLATE BOUNDARIES
Bounded by three distinct types of boundaries which are
differentiated by the type of relative movement they exhibit.
1. Divergent Boundaries – where plates move a part,
resulting in upwelling of material from the mantle to create
new seafloor.
2. Convergent Boundaries – where plates move together,
resulting in the subduction of oceanic lithosphere into the
mantle or Convergence can also result in the collision of two
continental margins to create a major mountain system.
3. Transform Fault Boundaries – where plates grind past
each other without the production or destruction of
lithosphere.
DIVERGENT BOUNDARIES
• Occurs mainly along the oceanic ridge.
• Seafloor Spreading is the dominant process associated
with divergent boundaries; zones are sometimes referred
to as Spreading Centers.
• The thickness of the oceanic lithosphere is age dependent.
The older (colder) it is, the greater its thickness.
CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES
• The surface expression produced by the descending plate
is a deep-ocean trench.
• Plate Margins where oceanic crust is being consumed are
called subduction zones.
• Whenever slabs of continental lithosphere and oceanic
lithosphere converge, the continental plate being less
dense remains floating, while the denser oceanic
lithosphere sinks into the asthenosphere.
• Volcanic Island Arc – a chain of volcanic structures that
emerge from the sea, found in the Pacific Ocean. CHAPTER 2: MATTER AND MINERALS
• When an oceanic plate is subducted beneath continental
lithosphere, an Andean-type Mountain range develops MINERALS: BUILDING BLOCKS OF ROCKS
along the margin of the continent. • Mineralogy (Mineral = Mineral; Logy = Study)
• Continental lithosphere is buoyant, which prevents it from • The first minerals mined were flint and Chert, for fashioned
being subducted to any great depth. into weapons and cutting tools.
• 3,700BC, Egyptians began mining gold, silver, and copper.
TRANSFORM FAULT BOUNDARIES • 2,000BC Humans discovered how to combine copper with
▪ The faults form in the direction of the plate movement and were tin to make bronze, a strong, hard alloy.
first discovered in association with offsets in oceanic ridges.
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• Only 8 elements make up most of the rock-forming • The Gaseous components, called Volatiles – are
minerals and represent more than 98% (weight) of the materials that will vaporize (form a gas) at surface pressure.
continental crust. The most common volatile are water vapor (H2O), carbon
• Silicon and Oxygen are by far the most common dioxide (CO2), and sulfur dioxide (SO2) that are confined in
elements in Earth’s crust. immense pressure exerted by the overlying rocks.
• Silicates - the most common mineral group forms because
the oxygen and silicon as the basic building block. FROM MAGMA TO CRYSTALLINE ROCK
• Common non-silicate minerals groups include carbonates, • Heating causes the ions to occupy more space which in turn
sulfates, and halides. causes the solid to expand.
• Crystallization – a process of reverses the event of
melting.
• When magma cools, it is generally the silicon and oxygen
atoms that link together to form silicon-oxygen tetrahedra,
the basic building block of silicate minerals.
• Igneous Rock – is a solid mass of interlocking silicate
minerals.
• Crystallization of magma ranges with temperature of 200*C
or more.
IGNEOUS PROCESSES
Igneous rocks form in two basic settings:
1. When magma loses its mobility before reaching the surface it
eventually crystallizes to form Intrusive Igneous Rocks or also
QUARTZ known as Plutonic rocks. They are coarse-grained and consist
• Quartz is the only common silicate mineral consisting of visible crystals.
entirely of silicon and oxygen. 2. Igneous rocks that form when molten rock solidifies at the surface
• The term Silica is applied to quartz, SiO2. is classified as Extrusive Igneous Rocks or Volcanic Rocks,
• Quartz generally exhibits conchoidal fracture. they tend to be find-grained, or when volcanic debris falls to
Earth’s surface.
MUSCOVITE
• Muscovite is a common member of the mica family. IGNEOUS COMPOSITIONS
• Igneous rocks are composed mainly of silicate minerals.
CLAY MINERALS • The silicon and oxygen are by far the most abundant
• Clay is a term used to describe a category of complex constituents of igneous rocks. These elements plus ions of
minerals that have sheet structures and originates as aluminum, Calcium, sodium, potassium, magnesium, and
products of the chemical weathering of other silicate iron make up roughly 98% by weight of most magmas.
minerals. One of the most common clay minerals is • Dark (Ferromagnesian) Silicate – are rich in iron and/or
kaolinite. magnesium and comparatively low in silica.
• Light (Non-Ferromagnesian) Silicate – greater amounts
Mineral Resources – are the endowment of useful minerals in potassium, sodium, and calcium rather than iron and
ultimately available commercially. magnesium.
• Reserves – are identified deposits from which minerals can • Feldspar makes up at least 40% of most igneous rocks.
be extracted profitably.
• Ore – is used to denote those useful metallic minerals that GRANITIC (FELSIC) VERSUS BASALTIC (MAFIC)
can be mined at a profit. COMPOSITION
• Bingham Canyon, Utah Copper mining – one of the biggest • Granitic composition which has dominant minerals of
open-pit mines on Earth. light-colored silicates – quartz and feldspar. Granitic rocks
are referred as being felsic (derived from feldspar and
CHAPTER 3: IGNEOUS ROCKS AND INTRUSIVE ACTIVITY silica). Most granitic rocks contain about 10% dark silicate
minerals and are rich in silica about 70% and is the major
MAGMA: THE PARENT MATERIAL OF IGNEOUS ROCK constituent of the continental crust.
• Igneous Rocks (Ignis=fire) form as molten material rock • Basaltic Composition rocks that contain substantial dark
cools and solidifies. silicate minerals and calcium-rich plagioclase feldspar (but
• Magma – is formed by melting that occurs at various level no quartz), contains high percentage of ferromagnesian
within Earth’s crust and upper mantle to depths of about 250 minerals which is referred as mafic (from magnesium and
km (150 mi). ferrum, the Latin name for iron) and are typically darker and
o A magma body buoyantly rises toward the denser than granitic rocks which makes up the ocean floor
surface because it is less dense than the as well as volcanic island.
surrounding rocks. • Intermediate or Andesitic Composition are rocks with
o Lava is when molten rock reaches the Earth’s composition between granitic and basaltic, containing at
surface. least 25% dark silicate minerals, mainly amphibole,
THE NATURE OF MAGMA pyroxene and biotite mica and other being plagioclase
Magma – is completely or partly molten rock, which on cooling feldspar, and they are typically associated with volcanic
solidifies to form igneous rock composed of silicate minerals. Most activity confined to the margins of the continents.
magmas consist of three distinct parts – a liquid component, a solid • Ultramafic is when the chemical composition is composed
component, a gaseous phase. entirely ferromagnesian minerals with peridotite. Peridotite
• The Liquid portion, called Melt – mainly of mobile ions of contains mostly olivine and pyroxene and is the main
the eight most common elements found in Earth’s crust – constituent of the upper mantle.
silicon and oxygen, with lesser amounts of aluminum,
potassium, calcium, sodium, iron and magnesium.
• The Solid component are the silicate minerals that
crystallized from the meld.
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Porphyritic Texture
• Exhibit when a large mass of magma may require tens to
hundreds of thousands of years to solidify, large crystals
embedded in a matrix of smaller crystals.
• Phenocrysts – the large crystals
• Groundmass – matrix of smaller crystals
• Porphyry – a rock with porphyritic texture
ORIGIN OF MAGMA
• Most magma originates in the upper most mantle. The
greatest quantities are produced at divergent plate
boundaries associated with seafloor spreading. Lesser
amounts in subduction zones.
Lava Tubes – cave-like tunnels that are hardened basaltic flows and
are associated with volcanoes that emit fluid basaltic lava and are
found in most parts of the world.
Blocks Lavas – consist of upper surface that is largely of vesicles-
free, detached blocks, although similar to aa flows, this lava consists
of blocks with slightly curved, smooth surfaces, rather than the rough,
clinker surfaces.
Pillow Lavas – are the result of a lava flow composed of numerous
tube-like structures and indicate that the lava flow formed in an
underwater environment.
Gas
• Volcanoes are also natural sources of air pollution.
• The gaseous portion of most magmas makes up from 1 to
6% of the total weight, most in the form of water vapor.
Pyroclastic Materials
When volcanoes erupt energetically, they eject pulverized rock, lava,
CHAPTER 4: VOLCANOES AND VOLCANIC HAZARDS and glass fragments from the vent and particles produced are
referred to as pyroclastic materials (pyro=fire, clast=fragment).
THE NATURE OF VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS • Ash and dust particles are produced when gas-rich viscous
• Volcanic Activity is perceived as a process that produces magma erupts explosively.
a picturesque, cone-shaped structure that periodically • Welded tuff – when the hot ash falls, the glassy shards
erupts in a violent manner. often fuse to form a rock.
• The primary factors whether the eruption is violent or gently • Lapilli (little stones) – are larger pyroclasts that ranges in
are: size from small beads to walnuts and are commonly called
1. Magma Composition Cinders (2-64mm).
2. Temperature • Blocks and Bombs – particles larger than 64mm (2.5in) in
3. Amount of Dissolved Gasses diameter when they are made of hardened lava and when
they are ejected as incandescent lava, respectively.
**These factors affect the magma’s mobility, or viscosity. • Scoria – the name applied to vesicular ejecta that is a
product of basaltic magma. Black to reddish-brown in color
FACTORS AFFECTING VISCOSITY fragments that are found in the size range of lapilli and
• Basalt contains about 50% silica, whereas magmas that resembles cinders and clinkers produced by furnaces used
produced felsic rocks (granite and its extrusive equivalent, to smelt iron.
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• Pumice – when magmas with intermediate (andesitic) or of repose, coarse materials contribute to the steep slopes
felsic (rhyolitic) compositions erupt and has smit ash and of the summit area.
vesicular rock. • Others have a lake in their crater that may be hot and
• Pumice is lighter in color and less dense than scoria. muddy, such lakes are often highly acidic because of the
influx of sulfur and chlorine gases that react with water to
VOLCANIC STRUCTURES AND ERUPTIVE STYLES produce sulfuric H2SO4 and HCl.
• Three major volcanic types – Shield volcanoes, cinder
cones, and composite cones.
ANATOMY OF A VOLCANO
• Volcanic activity begins when a fissure (crack) develops
in the crust as magma moves forcefully toward the surface,
gas-rich magma moves up through a fissure, localized into
a circular Conduit, or pipe – that terminates at a surface
opening called a Vent.
• Crater – is the funnel-shaped depression.
• Calderas – are very large circular depressions and have
diameters greater than 1 km. VOLCANIC PIPES AND NECKS
• Pyroclastic Cone (Parasitus=one who eats at the table of • Pipes – when volcanoes are fed by magma through short
another) conduits that connect a magma chamber to a surface.
• Fumaroles – emits only gases. • Diatreme – are type of pipe that extends to depths that
exceeds 200km.
• Hotspot – is a localized volcanic regions a few km across. ▪ Lahar, which can occur even when a volcano is quiet, are perhaps
Geologist determined that the mantle beneath hot spots the next most dangerous volcanic hazard.
must be 100 to 150*C hotter than normal mantle material.
• Mantle Plumes is responsible for the vast outpouring of Monitoring Volcanic Activity
basaltic lava created the large basalt plateaus including A large earthquake triggers a volcanic eruption, or at least disturbs the
Siberian Traps in Russia, Deccan Plateau in India, and volcano’s plumbing.
Ontong Java Plateau in western Pacific. The four most noticeable changes in a volcanic landscape caused by
Iceland – one of the largest volcanic islands in the world with 20 active the migration of magma are:
volcanoes and numerous geysers and hot springs. 1. Changes in the patters of volcanic earthquakes
2. Expansion of near-surface magma chamber, which leads to
inflation of the volcano.
3. Changes in the amount and/or composition of the gases that are
released from a volcano.
4. An increase in ground temperature caused by the emplacement
of new magma.
WEATHERING
• Occurs when rock is mechanically fragmented
(disintegrated and/or chemically altered (decomposed).
1. Mechanical weathering is accomplished by physical
forces that breaks rock into smaller and smaller pieces
without changing the rock’s mineral composition.
2. Chemical weathering involves chemical
transformation of rock into one or more new
compounds.
MECHANICAL WEATHERING
• Four physical processes are important in breaking rocks
into smaller fragments – frost wedging, salt crystal growth,
expansion resulting from unloading, and biological activity.
• Work of erosional agents such as wind, glacial ice, rivers
and waves are usually considered separately from
mechanical weathering.
CHEMICAL WEATHERING
• Breaking rock into smaller pieces aids chemical weathering
by increasing the surface area available for chemical attack.
• Chemical weathering involves the complex processes that
break down rock components and internal structures of
minerals.
• Water is by far the most important agent of chemical
weathering.
LIVING WITH VOLCANOES • The most abundant products of chemical breakdown of
Volcanic Hazards feldspar are residual clay minerals.
▪ Perhaps the greatest threats to life are pyroclastic flows.
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• Clay minerals are the end products of weathering and very (humus) in which plant structures can no longer be
stable under surface condition. identified.
• The most abundant sedimentary rock, shale, contains a
high proportion of clay minerals. 2. A Horizon – is underlying of the organic-rich O horizon, that
is largely mineral matter, yet biological activity is high, and
(The only common mineral that is very resistant to both mechanical and humus is generally present at up to 30%.
chemical weathering is Quartz) • A and O Horizons makes up the Topsoil.
3. E Horizon – is a light-colored layer that contains little
Spheroidal Weathering – weathered rock with a more rounded or organic material. As water percolates downward through
spherical shape, chemical weathering does produce forces great this zone, finer particles are carried away, this washing out
enough to cause mechanical weathering. of fine soil components is termed as Eluviation.
a) Leaching is the term for depletion of soluble materials
SOIL from upper soil.
Soil is a combination of mineral and organic matter, water, and air – 4. B Horizon – also termed as sub soil, much of the material
that portion of the regolith that supports the growth of plants. removed from the E horizon by eluviation is deposited in the
• Regolith – the layer of rock and mineral fragments B horizon and is often referred to as the Zone of
produced by weathering. Accumulation.
• Humus – the decayed remain of animal and plant life. a) Hardpan – is the extreme cases of clay accumulation
• Paleosols – ancient soils that are preserved and buried that formed a very compact and impermeable layer.
and provides useful info about climates and nature of o O, A, E, and B Horizons constitute the
landscapes thousands or millions of years ago. Solum or the True Soil – it is here that the
CONTROLS OF SOIL FORMATION soil-forming processes are active and living
• Soil is the product of the complex interplay of several factor. roots and other plant and animal life are
• The most important of these are parent material, time, confined and bear little resemblance to the
climate, plants, and animals. parent material.
Parent Material – the source of weathered mineral matter from which 5. C Horizon – is a layer characterized by partially altered
soil develops and is a major factor influencing a newly forming soil. parent material and has not yet crossed the threshold that
Residual soil is when the parent material is the bedrock. separates regolith from soil.
Transported soil is when those developed on unconsolidated a) Immature Soil – are soils lack horizons altogether
sediments that was transported soils form in place on parent materials because soil building has been going on for only a
that have been carried from elsewhere and deposited by gravity, short time, they are also characteristic of steep slopes
water, wind, or ice. where erosion continually strips away the soil and
• The type of parent material affects the rate of weathering preventing full development.
and thus the rate of soil formation.
• The chemical make-up of the parent material affects the
soil’s fertility. HOW IS SOIL IS ERODED
• Sheet Erosion is the process by which soil is moved
TIME by thin sheets of water.
• is an important component n every geological process and • Rills – tiny channels developed by threads of current.
is strongly influenced by the length of time that process • Gullies – are deeper cuts in the soil and are created
have been operating. as rills enlarge.
CLIMATE
• is the most influential control of soil formation where climatic
conditions are important in controlling the type of plant and
animal life present.
TOPOGRAPHY
▪ The optimum terrain for soil development is a flat-to-undulating
upland surface.
▪ Slope Orientation or the direction a slope is facing is important.