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Structural Geology (Geol 305) Semester (071)

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A tendency to split along planes other than bedding. ... The neck line of the boudin is the lineation and is commonly oriented parallel to the fold axes. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Structural Geology (Geol 305) Semester (071)


1
Structural Geology(Geol 305)Semester (071)
  • Dr. Mustafa M. Hariri

2
CLEAVAGE AND FOLIATIONS
3
CLEAVAGE
  • A tendency to split along planes other than
    bedding. Cleavage is directly linked to other
    deformation processes-especially folding- and
    metamorphism. It can help in understanding the
    fold geometry and the physical conditions during
    deformation. It may serve as a conduit for ground
    water

4
Fabric
  • Is used to describe the spatial and geometric
    relationships that make up the rock. It includes
    planar and linear structures-bedding, cleavage,
    and the orientation of minerals and their
    relationship to texture.

5
Slaty Cleavage
  • Is a penetrative structure (occurs in all scale).
    It consists of parallel grains of thin layer
    silicates (clay minerals or micas) or thin
    anastomosing subparallel zones insoluble residues
    produced by pressure solution.

6
S-surfaces
  • Planar and some curved structures in deformed
    rocks. They include all cleavages and foliations
    commonly though as penetrative structures. They
    also include nontectonic planar structure,
    bedding. In areas of multiple S-surfaces, a
    series of subscripts is assigned bedding being
    oldest is designated S0, S1 is the oldest
    cleavage (or foliation) and any later structures
    are given numerically higher subscripts.

7
Cleavage and Foliation can be divided into
  • Continuous Cut all the rock mass.
  • Spaced can be resolved into regions of uncleaved
    rock separated by cleavage planes spaced from
    less than a millimeters to several centimeters.
    The uncleaved zones between cleavage surfaces are
    called microlithons.

8
Spaced cleavage is divided into
  • Disjunctive (cross-cutting and not related to
    original layering)
  • Disjunctive cleavage may be divided into
  • styloitic
  • anastomosing
  • rough
  • smooth
  • Crenulation (which crenulates preexisting
    layering)
  • Crenulation cleavage may be divided into
  • discrete
  • zonal
  • Spacing in the different types of cleavage
  • slaty cleavage (continuous) 0.01 mm to less than
    1.o mm
  • crenulations cleavage 0.1 mm to 3cm
  • Shale usually display more closely spaced
    cleavage compared to sandstone that shows wide
    space cleavage (Figs. 17-4 and 17-7)

9
Cleavage types
  • Pressure solution
  • produces spaced cleavage by dissolving the most
    soluble parts of a rock mass leaving behind
    discrete insoluble residues in irregular planar
    zones that define cleavage (Fig. 17-8). Spacing
    of pressure solution ranges from less than a
    millimeter to more than a centimeter. They may be
    irregular ( styloitic to anastomsing to rough) to
    smooth, where rock mass is more severely
    deformed.
  • Slaty cleavage
  • is a planar tectonic structure resulting from
    parallel orientation of clays, muscovite, and or
    chlorite. It is penetrative and develop generally
    in rocks of fine-grained sedimentary and volcanic
    rocks, such as shale, mudstone, siltstone, and
    tuff.
  • FORMATION OF SLATY CLEAVAGE
  • Folding, Compression, Pressure solution,
    recrystalliztion and pure and simple shears
    concepts.

10
Cleavage types
  • Crenulation cleavage
  • cleavage marked by small-scale crinkling or
    crenulation. Most crinkles are spaced and
    asymmetric, and the short limb becomes usually
    the cleavage plane. They commonly form by
    deformation of an earlier cleavage or bedding.
  • Foliation
  • foliation is a term used to describe all type of
    cleavage slaty, crenulation and it is used also
    to describe the planar structure in
    coarser-grained metamorphic rocks, such as schist
    and gneiss where planar orientation of at least
    one mineral dominates the fabric (parallel of
    mica, amphibole, and flatten of quartz grains).
  • Schistosity refers to foliation in schistose.
  • Foliation is easily recognized if there is an
    alternate of quartz and feldspars with mica and
    amphibole.

11
Cleavage types
  • Metamorphic differentiation
  • formation of new layering by recrystallization
    or pressure solution. It is the production of new
    minerals with new orientation.
  • Differential layering
  • the foliation that is produced during
    metamorphism and recrystallization.
  • At high temperature and pressure this process
    will be enhanced with processes and gniessic
    banding may be produced.
  • Crenulations and spaced slaty cleavage may
    produce differential layering at low temperature
    and pressure.

12
CLEAVAGE BEDDING RELATIONSHIP
  • The angular relationship between cleavage and
    bedding can be used to determine whether one is
    observing the upright or the overturned limb of a
    fold.
  • If bedding dips less steeply (lower angle but
    same direction as cleavage) the rock will be on
    upright limb.
  • Care should be taken regarding the fold axis and
    timing of cleavage.

13
CLEAVAGE REFRACTION
  • Refraction of cleavage from layer to layer occurs
    where the texture and composition-ductility- vary
    from layer to layer in rocks. The angle between
    cleavage and bedding changes or refracts as the
    cleavage passes from one layer to another (Fig.
    17-16)
  • Most slaty cleavage forms parallel to axial
    surfaces in folds but may be displaced or fanned
    with respect to the hinge as folding proceeds
    (Fig. 17-17)

14
LINEAR STRUCTURES
  • Any structure that can be expressed as a real or
    imaginary line is linear structure or lineation.
  • Lineament is a topographic feature consisting of
    straight or aligned surficial features such as
    valleys and ridges.

15
Non-penetrative linear structures
  • Non-penetrative linear structures
  • Slickenlines are the direct result of frictional
    sliding.
  • Slinckensides refer to the entire movement
    surface develop on the fault surface, bedding,
    and foliation.
  • Slinkenfibers fibrous crystals of calcite,
    quartz, chlorite or iron oxides where their long
    axes are oriented in the direction of movement.

16
Penetrative linear structures
  • Penetrative linear structures
  • Intersection lineation (two cleavage or foliation
    planes)
  • Mineral lineation (alignment of grain aggregates
    of mica, amphibole or feldspars)
  • Pressure shadow of quartz, muscovite, chlorite,
    magnetite on either side of single crystal of
    pyrite
  • Rotated minerals
  • Rods rodding or grain aggregates of one or more
    minerals such as quartz, feldspars and mica (it
    is common in ductile shear zones)
  • Natural strain ellipsoids long axes of pebbles,
    boulders, vesicles and reduction spots.
  • Mullions form at boundaries between differing
    rock types.
  • Boudinage consists of lenticular segments of
    layer that has been pulled apart and flattened
    (layer been segmented is less ductile than
    enclosing).
  • Shape of boudins is affected by the degree of
    contrast between the two rocks. Large contrast
    produces boudins with sharp edges, and small
    contrast produces rounded boudins.
  • Boudins can produce under conditions of either
    ductile or brittle. Under brittle condition most
    boudins are angler and space between them is
    filled with less-competent rock

17
Type of Boudins
  • 1) Ordinary boudinage
  • consists of segmented, sausage shaped of a single
    layer in which the lenticular segments parallel
    one another. It results from extension of the
    layer in a single direction.
  • 2) Chocolate-block (chocolate tablet) boudinage
  • It is produced if layer-parallel extension has
    occurred in two directions, the resulting
    boudinage consists of a series of
    three-dimensional blocks.

18
Importance of Boudins
  • They yield information about strain, shear sense
    and difference in competence.
  • The neck line of the boudin is the lineation and
    is commonly oriented parallel to the fold axes.
  • Boundinage is frequently seen in the limbs of the
    folds, where most flattening and layer-parallel
    extension occurs.

19
LINEATION AS SHEAR-SENSE INDICATORS
  • Slickensides directly indicate movement sense by
    the direction of their lines and steps.
  • Boudins indicate the extension direction.
  • Mineral lineations yields sense of shear if the
    linear mineral is segmented in the movement
    direction.
  • Rotated minerals are shear-sense indicators-the
    direction of movement is perpendicular to the
    lineation (rotation axis)

20
FOLDS AND LINEATIONS
  • Intersection lineations tend to parallel fold
    axes.
  • Mullions and Boudin necks generally parallel the
    fold axes.
  • Mineral-elongation lineations sometimes parallel
    fold axes and are sometimes oriented oblique to
    normal to fold axes.
  • Deformed lineations are strain markers that can
    help to reveal the later deformation.
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