Geologic Terms
Geologic Terms
Geologic Terms
- AAa: A blocky and fragmented form of lava occurring in flows with fissured and angular
surfaces.
A-horizon: The uppermost layer of a soil, containing organic material and leached
minerals.
Algal mat: A layered communal growth of algae observed in fossils an in present day
tidal zones associated with carbonate sedimentation.
Alkali metal: A strongly basic metal like potassium or sodium.
Alluvial fan: A low, cone shaped deposit of terrestrial sediment formed where a stream
undergoes an abrupt reduction of slope.
Alluvium: Unconsolidated terrestrial sediment composed of sorted or unsorted sand,
gravel, and clay that has been deposited by water.
Angle of repose: The steepest slope angle in which particular sediment will lie without
cascading down.
Angstrom: A length of 10 to the minus tenth meter or one hundred millionth of a
centimeter.
Angular unconformity: An unconformity in which the bedding planes of the rocks above
and below are not parallel.
Anthracite: The most highly metamorphosed form of coal, containing 92 to 98 percent of
fixed carbon. It is black, hard, and glassy.
Aquifer: A permeable formation that stores and transmits groundwater in sufficient
quantity to supply wells.
Arkose: A variety of sandstone containing abundant feldspar and quartz, frequently in
angular, poorly sorted grains.
-BBackwash: The return flow of water down a beach after a wave has broken.
Banded iron ore: A sediment consisting of layers of chert alternating with bands of ferric
iron oxides (hematite and limonite) in valuable concentrations.
Bankfull stage: The height of water in a stream that just corresponds to the level of the
surrounding floodplain.
Bar: A unit of pressure equal to 10 to the sixth dynes/square centimeter; approximately
one atmosphere.
Bar (stream): An accumulation of sediment, usually sandy, which forms at the borders or
in the channels of streams or offshore from a beach.
Barchan: A crescent-shaped sand dune moving across a clean surface with its convex face
upwind and its concave slip face downwind.
Bar-finger sand: An elongated lens of sand deposited during the growth of a distributary
in a delta. The bar at the distributary mouth is the growing segment of the bar finger.
Barrier island: A long, narrow island parallel to the shore, composed of sand and built by
wave action.
Basalt: A fine-grained, dark, mafic igneous rock composed largely of plagioclase feldspar
and pyroxene.
Base-level: The level below which a stream cannot erode; usually sea level sometimes
locally the level of a lake or resistant formation.
Basement: The oldest rocks recognized in a given area, a complex of metamorphic and
igneous rocks that underlies all the sedimentary formations. Usually Precambrian or
Paleozoic in age.
Basic rock: Any igneous rock containing mafic minerals rich in iron and magnesium, but
containing no quartz and little sodium rich plagioclase feldspar.
Basin: In tectonics, a circular, syncline-like depression of strata. In sedimentology, the
site of accumulation of a large thickness of sediments.
Batholith: A great irregular mass of coarse-grained igneous rock with an exposed surface
of more than 100 square kilometers, which has either intruded the country rock or been
derived from it through metamorphism.
Bathymetry: The study and mapping of sea-floor topography.
Bauxite: A rock composed primarily of hydrous aluminum oxides and formed by
weathering in tropical areas with good drainage; a major ore of aluminum.
Bedding: A characteristic of sedimentary rocks in which parallel planar surfaces
separating different grain sizes or compositions indicate successive depositional surfaces
that existed at the time of sedimentation.
Bed-load: The sediment that a stream moves along the bottom of its channel by rolling
and bouncing.
Beta-particle: An electron emitted with high energy and velocity from a nucleus
undergoing radioactive decay.
B-horizon: The intermediate layer in a soil, situated below the A-horizon and consisting
of clays and oxides. Also called the zone of accumulation.
Biochemical precipitate: A sediment, especially of limestone or iron, formed from
elements extracted from seawater by living organisms.
Bituminous coal: A soft coal formed by an intermediate degree of metamorphism and
containing 15 to 20 percent volatiles. The most common grade of coal.
Block fault: A structure formed when the crust is divided into blocks of different
elevation by a set of normal faults.
Blowout: A shallow circular or elliptical depression in sand or dry soil formed by wind
erosion.
Bolson: In arid regions, a basin filled with alluvium and intermittent playa lakes and
having no outlet.
Bond: The force that holds together two atoms in a compound. It may be derived from the
sharing of electrons (covalent) or from electrostatic attraction between ions.
Butte: A steep sided and flat topped hill formed by erosion of flat laying strata where
remnants of a resistant layer protect the softer rocks underneath.
Cinder cone: A steep, conical hill built up about a volcanic vent and composed of coarse
pyroclasts expelled from the vent by escaping gases.
Cirque: The head of a glacial valley, usually with the form of one half of an inverted
cone. The upper edges have the steepest slopes, approaching vertical, and the base may
be flat or hollowed out and occupied by a small lake or pond.
Clastic rock: A sedimentary rock formed from mineral particles (clasts) that were
mechanically transported.
Clay: Any of a number of hydrous aluminosilicate minerals formed by weathering and
hydration of other silicates; also, any mineral fragment smaller than 1/255 mm.
Coal: The metamorphic product of stratified plant remains. It contains more than 50
percent carbon compounds and burns readily.
Coastal plain: A low plain of little relief adjacent to the ocean and covered with gently
dipping sediments.
Composite cone: The volcanic cone of a stratovolcano, composed of both cinders and
lava flows.
Contact metamorphism: Mineralogical and textural changes and deformation of rock
resulting from the head and pressure of an igneous intrusion in the near vicinity.
-DDatum plane: An artificially established, well surveyed horizontal plane against which
elevations, depths, tides, etc. are measured (for example mean sea-level).
Daughter element: Also "daughter product". An element that occurs in a rock as end
product of the radioactive decay of another element.
Debris avalanche: A fast downhill mass movement of soil and rock.
Declination: At any place on Earth, the angle between the magnetic and rotational poles.
Deflation: The removal of clay and dust from dry soil by strong winds.
Delta: A body of sediment deposited in an ocean or lake at the mouth of a stream.
Delta kame: A deposit having the form of a steep, flat topped hill, left at the front of a
retreating continental glacier.
Dendritic drainage: A stream system that branches irregularly and resembles a branching
tree in plan.
Density: The mass per unit volume of a substance, commonly expressed in grams/ cubic
centimeter.
Density current: A subaqueous current that flows on the bottom of a sea or lake because
entering water is denser due to temperature or suspended sediments.
Deposition: A general term for the accumulation of sediments by either physical or
chemical sedimentation.
Deposition remnant magnetization: A weak magnetization created in sedimentary rocks
by the rotation of magnetic crystals into line with the ambient field during settling.
Desert pavement: A residual deposit produced by continued deflation, which removes the
fine grains of a soil and leaves a surface covered with closely packed cobbles.
Detrital sediment: A sediment deposited by a physical process.
Diagenesis: The physical and chemical changes undergone by a sediment during
lithification and compaction, excluding erosion and metamorphism.
Diatom: A one celled plant that has a siliceous framework and grows in oceans and lakes.
Diatomite: A siliceous chert-like sediment formed from the hard parts of diatoms.
Diatom ooze: A fine muddy sediment consisting of the hard parts of diatoms.
Diatreme: A volcanic vent filled with breccia by the explosive escape of gases.
Differentiated planet: One that is chemically zoned because heavy materials have sunk to
the center and light materials have accumulated in a crust.
Dip: The angle by which a stratum or other planar feature deviates from the horizontal.
The angle is measured in a plane perpendicular to the strike.
Divide: A ridge of high ground separating two drainage basins emptied by different
streams.
Dome: In structural geology, a round or elliptical upwarp of strata resembling a short
anticline.
Drainage basin: A region of land surrounded by divides and crossed by streams that
eventually converge to one river or lake.
Drift (glacial): A collective term for all the rock, sand, and clay that is transported and
deposited by a glacier either as till or as outwash.
Drumlin: A smooth, streamlined hill composed of till.
Dry wash: An intermittent streambed in an arroyo or canyon that carries water only
briefly after a rain.
Dune: An elongated mound of sand formed by wind or water.
-EEarthflow: A detachment of soil and broken rock and its subsequent downslope
movement at slow or moderate rates in a stream- or tongue like form.
Earthquake: The violent oscillatory motion of the ground caused by the passage of
seismic waves radiating from a fault along which sudden movement has taken place.
Ebb tide: The part of the tide cycle during which the water level is falling.
Echo-sounder: An oceanographic instrument that emits sound pulses into the water and
measures its depth by the time elapsed before they return.
Ecliptic: The plane that contains the Earth's orbit around the Sun.
Eclogite: An extremely high-pressure metamorphic rock containing garnet and pyroxene.
Ecology: The science of the life cycles, populations, and interactions of various
biological species as controlled by their physical environment, including also the effect of
life forms upon the environment.
Elastic limit: The maximum stress that can be applied to a body without resulting in
permanent strain.
Elastic rebound theory: A theory of fault movement and earthquake generation that holds
that faults remain locked while strain energy accumulates in the country rock, and then
suddenly slip and release this energy.
Electron: A negatively charged particle with negligible mass orbiting around the nucleus
of an atom.
Elevation: The vertical height of one point on the Earth above a given datum plane,
usually sea level.
Elliptical orbit: An orbit with the shape of a geometrical ellipse. All orbits are elliptical or
hyperbolic, with the Sun occupying one focus.
Eolian: Pertaining to or deposited by wind.
Eon: The largest division of geologic time, embracing several Eras, for example, the
Phanerozoic, 600 m.y. ago to present); also any span of one billion years.
Epicenter: The point on the Earth's surface directly above the focus or hypocenter of an
Earthquake.
Epoch: One subdivision of a geologic period, often chosen to correspond to a
stratigraphic series. Also used for a division of time corresponding to a paleomagnetic
interval.
Era: A time period including several periods, but smaller than an eon. Commonly
recognized eras are Precambrian, Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic.
Erosion: The set of all processes by which soil and rock are loosened and moved
downhill or downwind.
Eskar: A glacial deposit in the form of a continuous, winding ridge, formed from the
deposits of a stream flowing beneath the ice.
Eugeosyncline: The seaward part of a geosyncline; characterized by clastic sediments and
volcanism.
Eustatic change: Sea level changes that affect the whole Earth.
Eutrophication: A superabundance of algal life in a body of water; caused by an unusual
influx of nitrate, phosphate, or other nutrients.
Evaporite: A chemical sedimentary rock consisting of minerals precipitated by
evaporating waters, especially salt and gypsum.
Exfoliation: A physical weathering process in which sheets of rock are fractured and
detached from an outcrop.
Exobiology: The study of life outside the Earth.
Extinction angle: The angle between a crystallographic direction, such as a face or
cleavage plane, and the direction in which all light is blocked by a pair of crossed
polarizers.
-FFacies: The set of all characteristics of a sedimentary rock that indicates its particular
environment of deposition and which distinguish it from other facies in the same rock.
Fault: A planar or gently curved fracture in the Earth's crust across which there has been
relative displacement.
Fault-block mountain: A mountain or range formed as a horst when it was elevated
between parallel normal faults.
Fault plane: The plane that best approximates the fracture surface of a fault.
Faunal succession: The evolutionary sequence of life forms, especially as recorded by the
fossil remains in a stratigraphic sequence.
Felsic: An adjective used to describe a light-colored igneous rock poor in iron and
magnesium content, abundant in feldspars and quartz.
Fiord: A former glacial valley with steep walls and a U-shaped profile now occupied by
the sea.
Fissure: An extensive crack, break, or fracture in the rocks.
Fissure vein: A cleft or crack in the rock material of the earth's crust, filled with mineral
matter different from the walls and precipitated therin from aqueous solution.
Flood basalt: A plateau basalt extending many kilometers in flat, layered flows
originating in fissure eruptions.
Flood plain: A level plain of stratified alluvium on either side of a stream; submerged
during floods and built up silt and sand carried out of the main channel.
Flood tide: The part of the tide cycle during which the water is rising or leveling off at
high water.
Flow cleavage: In a metamorphic rock, the parallel arrangement of all planar or linear
crystals as a result of rock flowage during metamorphism.
Fluid inclusion: A small body of fluid that is entrapped in a crystal and has the same
composition as the fluid from which the crystal formed.
Flume: A laboratory model of stream flow and sedimentation consisting of a rectangular
channel filled with sediment and running water.
Focus (earthquake): The point at which the rupture occurs; synonymous with hypocenter.
Fold: A planar feature, such as a bedding plane, that has been strongly warped,
presumably by deformation.
Foliation: Any planar set of minerals or banding of mineral concentrations including
cleavage, found in a metamorphic rock.
Foraminifera: A class of oceanic protozoa most of which have shells composed of calcite.
Foraminiferal ooze: A calcareous sediment composed of the shells of dead Foraminifera.
Forset bed: One of the inclined beds found in crossbedding; also an inclined bed
deposited on the outer front of a delta.
Formation: The basic unit for the naming of rocks in stratigraphy: a set of rocks that are
or once were horizontally continuous, that share some distinctive feature of lithology, and
are large enough to be mapped.
Fossil: An impression, cast, outline, or track of any animal or plant that is preserved in
rock after the original organic material is transformed or removed.
Fossil fuel: A general term for combustible geologic deposits of carbon in reduced
(organic) form and of biological origin, including coal, oil, natural gas, oil shales, and tar
sands.
Free oscillation: The ringing or periodic deformation of the whole Earth at characteristic
low frequencies after a major earthquake.
Friction breccia: A breccia formed in a fault zone or volcanic pipe by the relative motion
of two rock bodies.
Fringing reef: A coral reef that is directly attached to a landmass not made of coral.
Fumarole: A small vent in the ground from which volcanic gases and heated groundwater
emerge, but not lava.
Geochronology: The science of absolute dating and relative dating of geologic formations
and events, primarily through the measurement of daughter elements produced by
radioactive decay in minerals.
Geologic cycle: The sequence through which rock material passes in going from its
sedimentary form, through diastrophism and deformation of sedimentary rock, then
through metamorphism and eventual melting and magma formation, then through
volcanism and plutonism to igneous rock formation, and finally through erosion to form
new sediments.
Geomorphic cycle: An idealized model of erosion wherein a plain is uplifted
epeirogenically, then dissected by rapid streams (youth), then rounded by d0wnslope
movements into a landscape of steep hills (maturity), and finally reduced to a new
peneplain at sea level (old age).
Geomorphology: The science of surface landforms and their interpretation on the basis of
geology and climate.
Geosyncline: A major downwarp in the Earth's crust, usually more than 1000 kilometers
in length, in which sediments accumulate to thicknesses of many kilometers. The
sediments may eventually be deformed and metamorphosed during a mountain-building
episode.
Geotherm: A curving surface within Earth along which the temperature is constant.
Geyser: A hot spring that throws hot water and steam into the air. The heat is thought to
result from the contact of groundwater with magma bodies.
Glacial rebound: Epeirogenic uplift of the crust that takes place after the retreat of a
continental glacier, in response to earlier subsidence under the weight of the ice.
Glacial striations: Scratches left on bedrock and boulders by overriding ice, and showing
the direction of motion.
Glacial valley: A valley occupied or formerly occupied by a glacier, typically with a Ushaped profile.
Glacier: A mass of ice and surficial snow that persists throughout the year and flows
downhill under its own weight. The size range is from 100 meters to 10,000 kilometers.
Glacier surge: A period of unusually rapid movement of one glacier, sometimes lasting
more than a year.
Glass: A rock formed when magma is too rapidly cooled (quenched) to allow crystal
growth.
Gully: A small steep-sided valley or erosional channel from 1 meter to about 10 meters
across.
Guyot: A flat-topped submerged mountain or seamount found in the ocean.
Gyre: The circular rotation of the waters of each major sea, driven by prevailing winds
and the Coriolis effect.
-HHalf-life: The time required for half of a homogeneous sample of radioactive material to
decay.
Hanging valley: A former glacial tributary valley that enters a larger glacial valley above
its base, high up on the valley wall.
Hard water: Water that contains sufficient dissolved calcium and magnesium to cause a
carbonate scale to form when the water is boiled or to prevent the sudsing of soap.
Heat conduction: The transfer of the rapid vibrational energy of atoms and molecules,
which constitutes heat energy, through the mechanism of atomic or molecular impact.
Heat engine: A device that transfers heat from a place of high temperature to a place of
lower temperature and does mechanical work in the process.
Hill: A natural land elevation, usually less than 1000 feet above its surroundings, with a
rounded outline. The distinction between hill and mountain depends on the locality.
Hogback: A formation similar to a Cuesta in that it is a ridge formed by slower erosion of
hard strata, but having two steep, equally inclined slopes.
Hooke's Law: The principle that the stress within a solid is proportional to the strain. It
holds only for strains of a few percent or less.
Hornfels: A high-temperature, low-pressure metamorphic rock of uniform grain size
showing no foliation. Usually formed by contact metamorphism.
Horst: An elongate, elevated block of crust forming a ridge or plateau, typically bounded
by parallel, outward-dipping normal faults.
Hot spring: A spring whose waters are above both human body and soil temperature as a
result of plutonism at depth.
-IIgneous rock: A rock formed by congealing rapidly or slowly from a molten state.
Ignimbrite: An igneous rock formed by the lithification of volcanic ash and volcanic
breccia.
Inclination: The angle between a line in the Earth's magnetic field and the horizontal
plane; also a synonym for dip.
Index of refraction: The ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to the speed in a material;
this ratio determines the amount that light is refracted as it passes into a crystal.
-JJoint: A large and relatively planar fracture in a rock across which there is no relative
displacement of the two sides.
Juvenile gas: Gases that come to the surface for the first time from the deep interior.
-LLaccolith: A sill-like igneous intrusion that forces apart two strata and forms a round,
lens-shaped body many times wider than it is thick.
Lahar: A mudflow of unconsolidated volcanic ash, dust, breccia, and boulders mixed with
rain or the water of a lake displaced by a lava flow.
Laminar flow: A flow regime in which particle paths are straight or gently curved and
parallel.
Landslide: The rapid downslope movement of soil and rock material, often lubricated by
groundwater, over a basal shear zone; also the tongue of stationary material deposited by
such an event.
Lapilli: A fragment of volcanic rock formed when magma is ejected into the air by
expanding gases. The size of the fragments ranges from sand- to cobble-size.
Lateral moraine: A moraine formed along the side of a valley glacier and composed of
rock scraped off or fallen from the valley sides.
Lava: Magma or molten rock that has reached the surface.
Lava tube: A sinuous, hollow tunnel formed when the outside of a lava flow cools and
solidifies and the molten material passing through it is drained away.
Leaching: The removal of elements from a soil by dissolution in water moving downward
in the ground.
Left-lateral fault: A strike-slip fault on which the displacement of the far block is to the
left when viewed from either side.
Levee: A low ridge along a stream bank, formed by deposits left when floodwater
decelerates on leaving the channel; also an artificial barrier to floods built in the same
form.
Limb (fold): The relatively planar part of a fold or of two adjacent folds (for example, the
steeply dipping part of a stratum between an anticline and syncline).
Limestone: A sedimentary rock composed principally of calcium carbonate (CaCO2),
usually as the mineral calcite.
Lineation: Any linear arrangement of features found in a rock.
Lithification: The processes that convert a sediment into a sedimentary rock.
Lithology: The systematic description of rocks, in terms of mineral composition and
texture.
Lithosphere: The outer, rigid shell of the Earth, situated above the asthenosphere and
containing the crust, continents, and plates.
Lode: An unusually large vein or set of veins containing ore minerals.
Longitudinal dune: A long dune parallel to the direction of the prevailing wind.
Longitudinal profile: A cross section of a stream from its mouth to its head, showing
elevation versus distance to the mouth.
Longshore current: A current that moves parallel to a shore and is formed from the
momentum of breaking waves that approach the shore obliquely.
Longshore drift: The movement of sediment along a beach by swash and backwash of
waves that approach the shore obliquely.
Lopolith: A large laccolith that is bowl-shaped and depressed in the center, possibly by
subsidence of an emptied magma chamber beneath the intrusion.
Lowland: Land of general low relief at the lower levels of regional elevation.
Low-velocity zone: A region in the Earth, especially a planar layer that has lower
seismic-wave velocities than the region immediately above it.
Luster: The general textural impression of a mineral surface, given by the light reflected
from it. Terms such as metallic, submetallic are standardized but subjective.
-MMaar volcano: A volcanic crater without a cone, believed to have been formed by an
explosive eruption of trapped gases.
Mafic mineral: A dark-colored mineral rich in iron and magnesium, especially a
pyroxene, amphibole, or olivine.
Magma: Molten rock material that forms igneous rocks upon cooling. Magma that
reaches the surface is referred to as lava.
Magma chamber: A magma-filled cavity within the lithosphere.
Magmatic water: Water that is dissolved in a magma or that is derived from such water.
Magnetic anomaly: The value of the local magnetic field remaining after the subtraction
of the dipole portion of the Earth's field.
Magnetic coupling: The transfer of momentum between celestial bodies, especially dust
and gas clouds, through magnetic forces.
Magnetic north pole: (1) The point where the Earth's surface intersects the axis of the
dipole that best approximates the Earth's field. (2) The point where the Earth's magnetic
field dips vertically downward.
Magnetic stratigraphy: The study and correlation of polarity epochs and events in the
history of the Earth's magnetic field as contained in magnetic rocks.
Magnetometer: An instrument for measuring either one orthogonal component or the
entire intensity of the Earth's magnetic field at various points.
Microseism: A weak vibration of the ground that can be detected by seismographs and
which is caused by waves, wind, or human activity, but not by an earthquake.
Migmatite: A rock with both igneous and metamorphic characteristics that shows large
crystals and laminar flow structures. Probably formed metamorphically in the presence of
water and without melting.
Mineral: A naturally occurring element or compound with a precise chemical formula and
a regular internal lattice structure. Organic products are usually not included.
Mineralogy: The study of mineral composition, structure, appearance, stability,
occurrence, and associations.
Miogeosyncline: A Geosyncline that is situated near a craton and receives chemical and
well-sorted elastic sediments from the continent.
Mohorovic discontinuity: The boundary between crust and mantle, marked by a rapid
increase in seismic wave velocity to more than 8 kilometers per second. Depth: 5 to 45
kilometers. Abbreviated "Moho" or "M-discontinuity."
Mohs scale of hardness: An empirical, ascending scale of mineral hardness with talc as 1,
gypsum 2, calcite 3, fluorite 4, apatite 5, orthoclase 6, quartz 7, topaz 8, corundum 9, and
diamond 10.
Monadnock: An isolated hill or mountain rising above a peneplain.
Monocline: The S-shaped fold connecting two horizontal parts of the same stratum at
different elevations. Its central limb is usually not overturned.
Moraine: A glacial deposit of till left at the margin of an ice sheet. See specifically by
name, ground moraine, longitudinal moraine, medial moraine, and terminal moraine.
Mountain: A steep-sided topographic elevation larger than a hill; also a single prominence
forming part of a ridge or mountain range.
Mudflow: A mass movement of material finer than sand, lubricated with large amounts of
water. Mudstone: The citified equivalent of mud, a fine grained sedimentary rock similar
to shale but more massive.
My.: Abbreviation for "million years."
Mylonite: A very fine lithified fault breccia commonly found in major thrust faults and
produced by shearing and rolling during fault movement.
-NNative metal: A natural deposit of a metallic element in pure metallic form, neither
oxidized nor combined with sulfur or other elements.
Neap tide: A tide cycle of unusually small amplitude, which occurs twice monthly when
the lunar and solar tides are opposed-that is, when the gravitational pull of the Sun is at
right angles to that of the Moon.
Nebula: An immense, diffuse body of interstellar gas and dust that has not condensed into
a star.
Nebular hypothesis: A theory of the formation of the planets that states that a rotating
nebula contracted and was then torn into fragments by centrifugal forces, with planets
condensing from the fragments.
Neutron: An electrically neutral elementary particle in the atomic nucleus having the
mass of one proton.
Neutron-activation analysis: A method of identifying isotopes of an element by
bombarding them with neutrons and observing the characteristic radioactive decay
products emitted.
Normal fault: A dip-slip fault in which the block above the fault has moved downward
relative to the block below.
-OOblique-slip fault: A fault that combines some strike slip motion with some dip-slip
motion.
Obsidian: Dark volcanic glass of felsic composition.
Octahedral coordination: The packing of six ions around an ion of opposite charge to
form an octahedron.
Oil field: An underground accumulation of oil and gas concentrated beneath an
impermeable trap, preventing its escape upward.
Oil shale: A dark-colored shale containing organic material that can be crushed and
heated to liberate gaseous hydrocarbons.
Old age: A stage in the geomorphic cycle, characterized by formation of a peneplain near
sea level.
Oolite: A sedimentary carbonate particle composed of spherical grains precipitated from
warm ocean water on carbonate platforms. Also a rock composed of such particles.
Opaque mineral: A mineral which transmits no light through a thin section under a
microscope. Usually a native metal, sulfide, or metallic oxide mineral.
Ophiolite suite: An assemblage of mafic and ultra-mafic igneous rocks with deep-sea
sediments supposedly associated with divergence zones and the sea-floor environment.
Orbit: The elliptical or hyperbolic path traced by a planet or meteorite or satellite in the
presence of a more massive body.
Ore: A natural deposit in which a valuable metallic element occurs in high enough
concentration to make mining economically feasible.
Ore mineral: The mineral of an ore that contains the useful element.
Original Horizontality, Principle of: The proposition of Steno, that all sedimentary
bedding is horizontal at the time of deposition.
Orogenic belt: A linear region, often a former geo-syncline, that has been subjected to
folding, and other deformation in a mountain-building episode.
Orogeny: The tectonic process in which large areas are folded, thrust-faulted,
metamorphosed, and subjected to plutonism. The cycle ends with uplift and the formation
of mountains.
Oscillation ripple: A ripple with a symmetrical cross section and a sharp peak formed by
waves.
Outcrop: A segment of bedrock exposed to the atmosphere.
Outgassing: The release of juvenile gases to the atmosphere and oceans by volcanism.
Outwash: A glaciofluvial sediment that is deposited by meltwater streams emanating
from a glacier. Overturned fold: A fold in which a limb has tilted past vertical so that the
older strata are uppermost. Oxbow lake: A long, broad, crescent-shaped lake formed
when a stream abandons a meander and takes a new course.
Oxidation: A chemical reaction in which electrons are lost from an atom and its charge
becomes more positive.
Oxidized element: An element occurring in the more positively charged of two common
ionic forms.
-PPahoehoe: A basaltic lava flow with a glassy, smooth, and undulating, or ropy, surface.
Paleoclimate: The average state or typical conditions of climate during some past
geologic period.
Paleocurrent map: A map of depositional currents that have been inferred from crossbedding, ripples, or other sedimentary structures.
Paleogeographic map: A map showing the surface landforms and coastline of an area at
some time in the geologic past.
Paleomagnetism: The science of the reconstruction of the Earth's ancient magnetic field
and the positions of the continents from the evidence of remnant magnetization in ancient
rocks.
Paleontology: The science of fossils, of ancient life-forms, and their evolution.
Paleowind: A prevailing wind direction in an area, inferred from dune structure or the
distribution of volcanic ash for one particular time in geologic history.
Pangaea: According to some theories, a great proto-continent from which all present
continents have broken off by the mechanism of sea-floor spreading and continental drift.
Panthalassa: A hypothetical primeval ocean covering two-thirds of the world except for
the continent of Pangaea.
Parent element: An element that is transformed by radioactive decay to a different
(daughter) element.
Peat: A marsh or swamp deposit of water-soaked plant remains containing more than 50
percent carbon.
Pedalfer: A common soil type in humid regions, characterized by an abundance of iron
oxides and clay minerals deposited in the B-horizon by leaching.
Pediment: A planar, sloping rock surface forming a ramp up to the front of a mountain
range in an arid region. It may be covered locally by thin alluvium.
P-wave: The primary or fastest wave traveling away from a seismic event through the
solid rock, and consisting of a train of compressions and dilations of the material.
Pyroclastic rock: A rock formed by the accumulation of fragments of volcanic rock
scattered by volcanic explosions.
Pyroclastic texture: The unsorted, angular, and un-rounded texture of the fragments in a
pyroclastic rock.
Pyroxene granulite: A coarse-grained contact metamorphic rock containing pyroxene,
formed at high temperatures and low pressures.
-QQuartz arenite: A sandstone containing very little except pure quartz grains and cement.
Quartzite: (1) A very hard, clean, white metamorphic rock formed from a quartz arenite
sandstone. (2) A quartz arenite containing so much cement that it resembles ( 1 ).
Quartzose sandstone: (1) A quartz arenite. (2) A clean quartz sandstone, less pure than a
quartz arenite, that may contain a moderate amount of other detrital minerals and/or
calcite cement.
-RRadial drainage: A system of streams running in a radial pattern away from the center of a
circular elevation, such as a volcano or dome.
Radiative transfer: One mechanism for the movement of heat, in which it takes the form
of long-wavelength infrared radiation.
Radiolarian: A class of one-celled marine animals with siliceous skeletons that have
existed in the ocean throughout the Phanerozoic Eon.
Radiolarian ooze: A siliceous deep-sea sediment composed largely of the skeletons of
radiolaria. Radiolarite: The lithified sedimentary rock formed from radiolarian ooze.
Ray: A linear landform of the lunar surface emanating from a large crater and extending
as much as 100 kilometers outward, probably consisting of fine ejecta thrown out by the
impact of a meteorite.
Rheidity: (1) The ability of a substance to yield to viscous flow under large strains. (2)
One thousand times the time required for a substance to stop changing shape when stress
is no longer applied.
Rhyolite: The fine-grained volcanic or extrusive equivalent of granite, light brown to gray
and compact. Richter magnitude scale: See Magnitude.
Ridge (mid-ocean): A major linear elevated landform of the ocean floor, from 200 to
20,000 kilometers in extent. It is not a single ridge, but resembles a mountain range and
may have a central rift valley.
Rift valley: A fault trough formed in a divergence zone or other area of tension.
Right-lateral fault: A strike-slip fault on which the displacement of the far block is to the
right when viewed from either side.
Ring dike: A dike in the form of a segment of a cone or cylinder, having an arcuare
outcrop.
Rip current: A current that flows strongly away from the sea shore through gaps in the
surf zone at intervals along the shoreline.
Ripple: A very small dune of sand or silt whose long dimension is formed at right angles
to the current. River order: See Stream order.
Rock cycle: The geologic cycle, with emphasis on the rocks produced; sedimentary rocks
are metamorphosed to metamorphic rocks, or melted to create igneous rocks, and all
rocks may be uplifted and eroded to make sediments, which lithify to sedimentary rocks.
Rock flour: A glacial sediment of extremely fine (silt-and clay-size) ground rock formed
by abrasion of rocks at the base of the glacier.
Rock glacier: A glacier-like mass of rock fragments or talus with interstitial ice that
moves downhill under the force of gravity.
Rockslide: A landslide involving mainly large blocks of detached bedrock with little or no
soil or sand. Rounding: The degree to which the edges and corners of a particle become
worn and rounded as a result of abrasion during transportation. Expressed as angular,
subrounded, well-rounded, etc.
Runoff: The amount of rain water directly leaving an area in surface drainage, as opposed
to the amount that seeps out as groundwater.
Rupture strength: The greatest stress that a material can sustain without fracturing at one
atmosphere pressure.
-SSaltation: The movement of sand or fine sediment by short jumps above the ground or
stream bed under the influence of a current too weak to keep it permanently suspended.
Sandblasting: A physical weathering process in which rock is eroded by the impact of
sand grains carried by the wind, frequently leading to ventifact formation of pebbles and
cobbles.
Sandstone: A detrital sedimentary rock composed of grains from 1/16 to 2 millimeters in
diameter, dominated in most sandstones by quartz, feldspar, and rock fragments, bound
together by a cement of silica, carbonate, or other minerals or a matrix of clay minerals.
Schist: A metamorphic rock characterized by strong foliation or schistosity.
Schistosity: The parallel arrangement of shaly or prismatic minerals like micas and
amphiboles resulting from nonhydrostatic stress in metamorphism.
Scoria: Congealed lava, usually of mafic composition, with a large number of vesicles
formed by gases coming out of solution.
Sea-floor spreading: The mechanism by which new sea floor crust is created at ridges in
divergence zones and adjacent plates are moved apart to make room. This process may
continue at 0.5 to 10 centimeters/year through many geologic periods.
Seamount: An isolated tall mountain on the sea floor that may extend more than 1
kilometer from base to peak (see also Guyot).
Secular variation: Slow changes in the orientation of the Earth's magnetic field that
appear to be long lasting and internal in origin as opposed to rapid fluctuations, which are
external in origin.
Sedimentary rock: A rock formed by the accumulation and cementation of mineral grains
transported by wind, water, or ice to the site of deposition or chemically precipitated at
the depositional site.
Sedimentary structure: Any structure of a sedimentary or weakly metamorphosed rock
that was formed at the time of deposition; includes bedding, cross-bedding, graded
bedding, ripples, scour marks, mud-cracks.
Sedimentation: The process of deposition of mineral grains or precipitates in beds or
other accumulations. Seif dune: A longitudinal dune that shows the sculpturing effect of
cross-winds not parallel to its axis.
Seismic discontinuity: A surface within the Earth across which P-wave or S-wave
velocities change rapidly, usually by more than +~0.2 kilometer/second.
Seismicity: The world-wide or local distribution of earthquakes in space and time; a
general term for the number of earthquakes in a unit of time.
Seismic profile: The data collected from a set of seismographs arranged in a straight line
with an artificial seismic source, especially the times of P-wave arrivals.
Seismic reflection: A mode of seismic prospecting in which the seismic profile is
examined for waves that have reflected from near-horizontal strata below the surface.
Seismic refraction: A mode of seismic prospecting in which the seismic profile is
examined for waves that have been refracted upward from seismic discontinuities below
the profile. Greater depths may be reached than through seismic reflection.
Seismic surface wave: A seismic wave that follows the earth's surface only, with a speed
less than that of S-waves. There are Raleigh waves (forward and vertical vibrations) and
Love waves (transverse vibrations).
Seismic transition zone: A seismic discontinuity, found in all parts of the Earth, at which
the velocity increases rapidly with depth; especially the one at 300 to 600 kilometers.
Stratification: A structure of sedimentary rocks, which have recognizable parallel beds of
considerable lateral extent.
Stratigraphic sequence: A set of beds deposited that reflects the geologic history of a
region.
Stratigraphy: The science of the description, correlation, and classification of strata in
sedimentary rocks, including the interpretation of the depositional environments of those
strata.
Stratovolcano: A volcanic cone consisting of both lava and pyroclastic rocks, often
conical.
Streak: The fine deposit of mineral dust left on an abrasive surface when a mineral is
scraped across it; especially the characteristic color of the dust.
Streak plate: A ceramic abrasive surface for streak tests.
Streaming flow: A tranquil flow slower than shooting flow.
Streamline: A curved line representing the successive positions of a particle in a flow as
time passes.
Stream order: The hierarchical number of a stream segment in dendritic drainage: the
smallest tributary streams have order one and at each junction of streams of equal order
the order of the subsequent segment is one higher.
Stress: A quantity describing the forces acting on each part of a body in units of force per
unit area. Striation: See Glacial striation.
Strike: The angle between true North and the horizontal line contained in any planar
feature (inclined bed, dike, fault plane, etc.); also the geographic direction of this
horizontal line.
Strike-slip fault: A fault whose relative displacement is purely horizontal.
Stromatolite: A fossil form representing the growth habit of an algal mat: concentric
spherules, stacked hemispheres, or flat sheets of calcium carbonate and trapped silt
encountered in limestones.
Subduction zone: A dipping planar zone descending away from a trench and defined by
high seismicity, interpreted as the shear zone between a sinking oceanic plate and an
overriding plate.
Sublimation: A phase change from the solid to the gaseous state, without passing through
the liquid state.
Submarine canyon: An underwater canyon in the continental shelf.
Subsidence: A gentle epeirogenic movement where a broad area of the crust sinks without
appreciable deformation.
Superposed stream: A stream that flows through resistant formations because its course
was established at a higher level on uniform rocks before down-cutting began.
Superposition, Principle of: The principle stated by Steno that, except in extremely
deformed strata, a bed that overlies another bed is always the younger.
Supersaturation: The unstable state of a solution that contains more solute than its
solubility allows.
Surf: The breaking or tumbling forward of water waves as they approach the shore.
Surf zone: An offshore belt along which the waves collapse into breakers as they
approach the shore.
Suspended load: The fine sediment kept suspended in a stream because the settling
velocity is lower than the upward velocity of eddies.
Swash: The landward rush of water from a breaking wave up the slope of the beach.
S-wave: The secondary seismic wave, traveling slower than the P-wave, and consisting of
elastic vibrations transverse to the direction of travel. It cannot penetrate a liquid.
Swell: An oceanic water wave with a wavelength on the order of 30 meters or more and a
height of perhaps 2 meters or less that may travel great distances from its source.
Symbiosis: The interaction of two mutually supporting species that do not compete with
or prey upon each other.
Syncline: A large fold whose limbs are higher than its center; a fold with the youngest
strata in the center.
System (stratigraphy): A stratigraphic unit larger than a series, consisting of all the rocks
deposited in one period of an era.
Transition element: Elements of atomic number 21 to 29, 38 to 46, and 71 to 78, whose
second outermost electron shell is only partially filled.
Transpiration: The removal of water from the ground into plants, ultimately to be
evaporated into the atmosphere by them.
Transverse dune: A dune that has its axis transverse to the prevailing winds or to a
current. The upwind or upcurrent side has a gentle slope, and the downwind side lies at
the angle of repose.
Trap (oil): A sedimentary or tectonic structure that impedes the upward movement of oil
and gas and allows it to collect beneath the barrier.
Travel-time curve: A curve on a graph of travel time versus distance for the arrival of
seismic waves from distant events. Each type of seismic wave has its own curve.
Travertine: A terrestrial deposit of limestone formed in caves and around hot
springs where cooling, carbonate-saturated groundwater is exposed to the air.
Trellis drainage: A system of streams in which tributaries tend to lie in parallel valleys
formed in steeply dipping beds in folded belts.
Trench: A long and narrow deep trough in the sea floor; interpreted as marking the line
along which a plate bends down into a subduction zone.
Triple junction: A point that is common to three plates and which must also be the
meeting place of three boundary features, such as divergence zones, convergence zones,
or transform faults.
Tsunami: A large destructive wave caused by sea-floor movements in an earthquake.
Tuff: A consolidated rock composed of pyroclastic fragments and fine ash. If particles are
melted slightly together from their own heat, it is a "welded tuff."
Turbidite: The sedimentary deposit of a turbidity current, typically showing graded
bedding and sedimentary structures on the undersides of the sandstones.
Turbidity current: A mass of mixed water and sediment that flows downhill along the
bottom of an ocean or lake because it is denser than the surrounding water. It may reach
high speeds and erode rapidly (see also Density current).
Turbulent flow: A high-velocity flow in which streamlines are neither parallel nor straight
but curled into small tight eddies (compare Laminar flow).
-VVadose zone: The region in the ground between the surface and the water table in which
pores are not filled with water. Also called the unsaturated zone.
Valence electron: An electron of the outermost shell of an atom; one of those most active
in bonding.
Valley glacier: A glacier that is smaller than a continental glacier or an icecap, and which
flows mainly along well-defined valleys, many with tributaries.
Van der Waals bond: A bond much weaker than the ionic or covalent, which bonds atoms
by small electrostatic attraction.
Varve: A thin layer of sediment grading upward from coarse to fine and light to dark,
found in a lake bed and representing one year's deposition of glacial outwash.
Vector: A mathematical element that has a direction and magnitude, but no fixed position.
Examples are force and gravity.
Vein: A deposit of foreign minerals within a rock fracture or joint.
Ventifact: A rock that exhibits the effects of sand-blasting or "snowblasting" on its
surfaces, which become fiat with sharp edges in between.
Vertical exaggeration: The ratio of the horizontal scale (for example, 100,000: 1) to the
vertical scale (for example, 500: 1) in an illustration.
Vesicle: A cavity in an igneous rock that was formerly occupied by a bubble of escaping
gas.
Viscosity: A measure of resistance to flow in a liquid.
Volcanic ash: A volcanic sediment of rock fragments, usually glass, less than 4
millimeters in diameter that is formed when escaping gases force out a fine spray of
magma.
Volcanic ash fall: A deposit of volcanic ash resting where it was dropped by eruptions and
winds.
Volcanic ash flow: A mixture of volcanic ash and gases that moves downhill as a density
current in the atmosphere.
Volcanic block: A pyroclastic rock fragment ranging from about fist- to car-sized.
Volcanic bomb: A pyroclastic rock fragment that shows the effects of cooling in flight in
its streamlined or "bread-crust" surface.
Volcanic breccia: A pyroclastic rock in which all fragments are more than 2 millimeters in
diameter.
Volcanic cone: The deposit of lava and pyroclastic materials that has settled close to the
volcano's central vent.
Volcanic dome: A rounded accumulation around a volcanic vent of congealed lava too
viscous to flow away quickly; hence usually rhyolite lava. Volcanic dust: See Volcanic
ash.
Volcanic ejecta blanket: A collective term for all the pyroclastic rocks deposited around a
volcano, especially by a volcanic explosion.
Volcanic emanations: Gases, especially steam, emitted from a vent or released from lava.
Volcanic pipe: The vertical chamber along which magma and gas ascend to the surface;
also, a formation of igneous rock that cooled in a pipe and remains after the erosion of the
volcano.
Volcano: Any opening through the crust that has allowed magma to reach the surface,
including the deposits immediately surrounding this vent.
V-shaped valley: A valley whose walls have a more-or-less uniform slope from top to
bottom, usually formed by stream erosion.
-YYouth (geomorphology): A stage in the geomorphic cycle in which a landscape has just
been uplifted and is beginning to be dissected by canyons cut by young streams.
-ZZeolite: A class of silicates containing H=O in cavities within the crystal structure.
Formed by alteration at low temperature and pressure of other silicates, often volcanic
glass.
Zoned crystal: A single crystal of one mineral that has a different chemical composition
in its inner and outer parts. Formed from minerals belonging to a solid-solution series,
and caused by the changing concentration of elements in a cooling magma that results
from crystals settling out.