Stereo Nets

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LABORATORY 2: Stereographic Projections I

I. Stereographic Projections

a) Two types

1. Equal-area (Schmidt)
2. Equal-angle (Wulff)

b) Equal-angle stereonets are used in crystallography because the plotted angular


relationships are preserved, and can be measured directly from the stereonet plot.

c) Equal-area stereonets are used in structural geology because they present no


statistical bias when large numbers of data are plotted. On the equal-area net area is
preserved so, for example, each 2° polygon on the net has the same area.

d) In structural geology the stereonet is assumed to be a lower-hemisphere projection


since all structural elements are defined to be inclined below the horizontal. This is
unlike crystallographic projections where elements may plot on either the upper or
lower hemisphere.

II. Elements of the Stereonet

a) The outer perimeter of the stereonet is termed the primitive. The primitive is always
a perfect circle. Usually the diameter of the primitive is some convenient length, such
as 10 cm.

b) The north pole of the stereonet is the upper point where all lines of longitude
converge. The south pole is the equivalent lower convergence point.

c) Lines that run from the north to south pole of the stereonet are termed great circles
and are analogous to lines of longitude on a globe. The lines of longitude can be
visualized as forming from planes that strike due north and intersect the lower
hemisphere at 2° increments. The bolder lines are 10° increments. It is possible to
measure the true dip of a plane only along the east-west line. There is one great circle
that is a straight line- it runs directly from the north to south polar position.

d) Circular arcs that run east-west are termed small circles. Small circles can be
visualized by rotating a horizontal line from, for example, N20°E azimuth around a
horizontal and due north azimuth. The path of the end point of the line would describe
the small circle that begins at N20°E and terminates at N20°W. Note that the amount
of rotation would be 180° because we only need inscribe the small circle on the lower

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hemisphere. The east-west reference line of the stereonet is the only small circle that is
actually a plane. There is only one small circle that is a straight line- it runs from the
due east to the due west position.

e) Note that since the plunge of a line is measured in a vertical plane that we can
measure the plunge of a line along the east-west or north-south reference lines.

III. Plotting Planes and Lines on the Stereonet.

a) A plane intersects the lower hemisphere as a great circle. A sheet of tracing paper
should be fixed to the center tack of the net to allow rotation. Rotate until the strike
attitude is attained and then plot the great circle that corresponds to the correct true dip
value. Remember to count the true dip angle from the primitive. Verify the plot by
rotating the north reference back to the north point on the net.

b) A vertical plane plots as a straight line diameter on the stereonet. A horizontal plane
is the primitive.

c) In many situations it is more convenient to plot the pole of a plane rather than the
great circle. The pole represents the line that is perpendicular to the plane. Since the
intersection of a line with the lower hemisphere is a point, the pole will always plot as
a point, and will always have an attitude measured as a plunge and bearing.

d) To plot the pole, find the point along the east-west line where the great circle
representation of the plane crosses. From this point count 90° toward the center- this is
the pole point. Note that the dip angle of the plane and the plunge of the pole are
always complementary angles.

e) A linear structure element will always intersect the lower hemisphere at a point, so,
like the pole to a plane, you will always plot linear data as a point.

f) To plot a linear attitude, rotate the bearing of the structure until it is parallel to either
the north-south or east-west line (it makes no difference). From the primitive, count
toward the center the number of degrees equal to the plunge. Plot the point at this
position.

g) Note that a line with a plunge of 0° will plot as two points on the primitive at each
end of the bearing line. A plunge of 90° always plots at the center of the net.

IV. Solving Problems with the Stereonet.

a) You can think of the stereonet as basically a three-dimensional protractor and, just

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like a two-dimensional protractor, it is useful for determining the angular relationships
between three-dimensional lines and/or planes.

b) True and apparent dip problems that can be solved graphically or mathematically
can also be solved on the stereonet. In fact, the stereonet is usually the tool of choice
for solving these problems because of its speed.

1. Given strike and true dip solve for apparent dip.


2. Given two apparent dips solve for strike and true dip.
3. Given strike and one apparent dip find the true dip angle.

c) The line of intersection of two planes can be found by simply plotting both planes.
The point where the two great circles intersect defines the line contained by both
planes.

d) The angle between two lines can be determined by plotting both points on the
stereonet that represent the two linear elements. Rotate the paper until both points fall
on the same great circle. The great circle represents the plane that contains both lines.
Counting the number of small circle angular divisions between these two points yields
the angle between the two lines.

e) The angle between two lines in a common plane - the rake angle is one example -
can be determined easily with the stereonet. The angle is measured by counting the
amount of angular arc between the two points along the great circle representing the
plane.

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EXERCISE 2A: Stereographic Projections I

When you construct your plot make sure that you use a compass to draft the perimeter
of the stereonet. Always include a tic mark with an "N" to indicate the north reference. Label
all great circles and points on the plot. Construct a "+" in the center of the stereonet where the
tack hole was located during construction of the problem.
You should use a stereonet with a radius of 3.5 inches to plot the below problems. The
windows program "NETPROG" can be used (and will be demonstrated in lab) to plot a net of
this size. You should use an equal-area projection (Schmidt). The “NETPROG.EXE” program
file is in the public domain so you may copy it freely if you wish.

Problem 1: A bed has an attitude of N40°E, 60°SE. What is its apparent dip angle in a vertical
plane trending N90°E?

Problem 2: The vertical faces of a quarry trend N90°W and N0°E respectively. A coal seam
has apparent dip of 20°N in the N0°E wall and 40°W in the N90°W wall. What is the strike
and true dip of the coal seam?

Problem 3: Two dikes with orientations of:

(1) N60°E, 30°SE


(2) N10°W, 60°SW

intersect. What is the bearing and plunge of the line of intersection between these two planar
structures?

Problem 4: A thin planar bed (N12°W, 35°SW) intersects a vein (N27°E, 57°NW). If we
assume that both structures are essentially planar geometries, what is the plunge and bearing
of the line of intersection of the two planes? What is the apparent dip of both the vein and the
bed in the N90°W direction?

Problem 5: A sequence of formations which strike N50°E each display an apparent dip of
35°N in the N0°E direction. What is the true dip amount and quadrant direction?

Problem 6: A planar coal seam has an attitude of N65°E, 35°NW. Find the apparent dips
along vertical cuts trending:

(1) N10°E
(2) N20°W
(3) N90°W

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Problem 7: Given two apparent dips (12°, N57°W; 11°, S20°E) for a pegmatite dike, and two
apparent dips (78°, N90°E; 13°, S32°W) for a carbonaceous schist layer, find the orientation
of both planar structures. The presence of graphite in the schist caused a reaction in the
pegmatite that produced cassiterite (SnO2). Starting at the point where the mineralized zone is
exposed, along what bearing and plunge would you instruct your mining engineer to sink a
mine shaft to mine this ore?

Problem 8: A polydeformed metamorphic rock contains two different mineral lineations that
lie within the plane of S1 foliation:

Mineral lineation (1): 14°, N10°E


Mineral lineation (2): 58°, S58°E

Find the following:

(a) Attitude of the S1 foliation plane containing the two mineral lineations.
(b) Rake of each lineation relative to the S1 plane.
(c) What is the angle (< 90°) between the two lineations as measured within the S1
plane?

Problem 9: A planar fault contact contains slickenside lineations that trend N60°W. The fault
contact has an attitude of N10°E,80°NW. Find the following:

(a) What is the plunge of the lineation?


(b) What is the rake angle of the lineation relative to the fault contact?

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EXERCISE 2B: Stereographic Projections I

When you construct your plot make sure that you use a compass to draft the perimeter
(primitive) of the stereonet. Always include a tic mark with an "N" to indicate the north
reference. Label all great circles and points on the plot. Construct a "+" in the center of the
stereonet where the tack hole was located during construction of the problem.
You should use a stereonet with a radius of 3.75 inches to plot the below problems.
The windows program "NETPROG.EXE" can be used (and will be demonstrated in lab) to
plot a net of this size. You should use an equal-area projection (Schmidt). The
“NETPROG.EXE” program file is public domain so you may copy it freely if you wish.

Problem 1: A bed has an attitude of N40°E, 40°SE. What is its apparent dip angle in a vertical
plane trending N90°E?

Problem 2: The vertical faces of a quarry trend N70°W and N10°E respectively. A coal seam
has apparent dip of 24° in the N10°E wall and 46° in the N70°W wall. What is the strike and
true dip of the coal seam?

Problem 3: Two dikes with orientations of:

(1) N70°E, 20°SE


(2) N20°W, 70°SW

intersect. What is the bearing and plunge of the line of intersection between these two planar
structures?

Problem 4: A thin, planar bed (N22°W, 45°SW) intersects a vein (N37°E, 37°SE). If we
assume that both structures are geometric planes, what is the plunge and bearing of the line of
intersection of the two planes?

Problem 5: A sequence of formations which strike N70°E each display an apparent dip of 25°
in the N0°E direction. What is the true dip amount and quadrant direction?

Problem 6: A planar coal seam has an attitude of N35°E, 35°NW. Find the apparent dips
along vertical cuts trending:

(1) N10°E
(2) N20°W
(3) N90°W

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Problem 7: Given two apparent dips (12°, N57°W; 11°, S20°E) for a pegmatite dike, and two
apparent dips (78°, N90°E; 13°, S32°W) for a carbonaceous schist layer, find the orientation
of both planar structures. The presence of graphite in the schist caused a reaction in the
pegmatite that produced cassiterite (SnO2). Starting at the point where the mineralized zone is
exposed, along what bearing and plunge would you instruct your mining engineer to sink a
mine shaft to mine this ore?

Problem 8: A polydeformed metamorphic rock contains two different mineral lineations that
lie within the plane of S1 foliation:

Mineral lineation (1): 24°, N15°E


Mineral lineation (2): 44°, S48°E

Find the following:

(a) Attitude of the S1 foliation plane containing the two mineral lineations.
(b) Rake of each lineation relative to the S1 plane.
(c) What is the angle (< 90°) between the two lineations as measured within the S1
plane?

Problem 9: A planar fault contact contains slickenside lineations that trend N50°W. The fault
contact has an attitude of N20°E,60°NW. Find the following:

(a) What is the plunge of the lineation?


(b) What is the rake angle of the lineation relative to the fault contact?

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Figure 2-1: Equal-area (Schmidt) stereographic lower-hemisphere projection.

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