Geological A Practical Introduction 1590173559
Geological A Practical Introduction 1590173559
Geological A Practical Introduction 1590173559
2020
University of Alberta
Geological Structures: a Practical Introduction by John Waldron and Morgan Snyder is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial
4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
Contents
Acknowledgements vii
A. Geological Structures 3
B. Orientation of Structures 7
• Lab 1. Orientation of Lines and Planes 21
C. Primary Structures 25
• Lab 2. Cross-sections and Three-point Problems 41
D. Stereographic Projection 47
• Lab 3. Working with Stereographic Projections 53
E. Folds 65
• Lab 4. Introduction to Folds 81
• Lab 5. More about Folds 83
F. Boudinage 87
G. Kinematic Analysis and Strain 89
H. Fabrics 99
• Lab 6. Fabrics and Folds 109
I. Dynamic Analysis: Stress 111
J. Fractures 117
• Lab 7. Fractures 125
K. Faults 133
Lab 8. Measuring Fault Slip 147
L. Tectonic Environments of Faulting 151
• Lab 9. Field Mapping 161
• Lab 10. Fold and Thrust Belts 165
M. Shear Zones 171
N. Extraterrestrial Impact Structures 179
The Open Educational Resource version of this manual benefitted from an Open Educational Resources grant from the
University of Alberta, and the helpful advice and assistance of Krysta McNutt, Michelle Brailey and Jemma Forgie.
Acknowledgements | vii
About this document
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this course on Geological Structures you should be able to:
• Describe common geological structures in maps, outcrops and samples, using terms that can be
understood by other geologists;
• Construct geological cross-sections based on evidence in maps;
• Calculate angles and distances between geological structures using data from geological maps;
• Interpret the history of changes in the Earth’s crust that produced geological structures observed at the
Earth’s surface.
Preliminaries
This manual is about structures that occur within the Earth’s crust. Structures are the features that allow geologists
to figure out how parts of the Earth have changed position, orientation, size and shape over time. This work requires
careful observation and measurements of features at the surface of the Earth, and deductions about what’s below the
surface. The practical skills you will learn in this course form the foundation for much of what is known about the history
of the Earth, and are important tools for exploring the subsurface. They are essential for Earth scientists of all kinds.
The course that this document supports is about doing structural geology. It’s not possible to be a good geologist (or to
pass the course) just by learning facts. You have to be able to solve problems. Do your lab work conscientiously and get
as much as possible done during lab sessions when instructors are available to help you.
This manual consists of both readings and lab exercises, which alternate through the text. The readings are designed
to be read and understood outside the lab sessions, whereas the labs contain specific instructions and questions to be
completed. Before each lab, be sure you have covered the readings that come immediately before it.
Many problems in structural geology involve thinking in three dimensions. This is the largest challenge that you will face
in working with the material in this book. Different people use different strategies for thinking in 3D. Your instructors
will sometimes be able to offer a range of strategies and techniques. Make use of their skills whenever you have
difficulty.
This manual was written to support the course “EAS233 Geologic Structures” at the University of Alberta in Canada. The
course is typically taught between January and April. During January and February it is too cold for effective geological
fieldwork, so the outdoor lab (lab 9) takes place toward the end of the class. In a warmer climate, the data collection
part of this lab could be done earlier in the course.
You should have completed a course in introductory geology. Here are some of the things you are expected to know.
• Maps and map scales: You should be able to convert a map scale expressed as a representative fraction (e.g.
1:50,000) to a map scale expressed in metric or imperial length units (2 cm = 1 km) and draw a scale bar based on
either. You should understand topographic contours and should be able to look at a map with topographic
contours and identify hills, valleys, and predict which way streams are flowing.
• Plate tectonics: Know the difference between continental and oceanic lithosphere, and the three major types of
plate boundary: spreading centres, subduction zones, transform faults.
• Minerals: Common rock-forming minerals such as quartz, feldspar, mica, amphibole, calcite.
• Basic rock types: You should know the names of basic rock types and be able to identify them. At minimum, these
should include the following:
• Igneous rocks: granite, diorite gabbro, peridotite, rhyolite, andesite, basalt, tuff.
• Sedimentary rocks: conglomerate, sandstone, mudstone and shale, limestone, dolostone, coal, chert, rock
salt, gypsum.
• Metamorphic rocks: slate, schist, gneiss, granofels, quartzite, marble.
• Geological time: You should know the sequence of eons: Archean, Proterozoic, Phanerozoic, and within the
Phanerozoic you should know the names of the eras and periods by heart.
We will assume you are familiar with these terms and their meanings. If any of them are unfamiliar, now is the
time to review the material from your introductory classes and make sure you know them!
Before you come to lab, read the relevant sections of this book, and any other assigned reading, carefully.
• Set up your work on each assignment with a cover page so that it’s easy to review and mark. The first page of each
set of answers for the assignments should consist of a sheet of paper with (1) your name, (2) EAS 233, (3)
Assignment X, (4) your laboratory section, and (5) the date of submission.
• Pass in only those pages of this book on which you have done work. Keep the instructional pages when possible, so
Academic Integrity
All work you present for evaluation in any course must be your own work. It is an academic offense if you:
In this course you will sometimes benefit from discussions with other students as well as teaching assistants, especially
in the labs. Although this discussion may help you decide how to solve problems in structural geology, the actual answers
you write down must be written in words and sentences composed by you alone, diagrams must be drawn by you, and
any measurements or calculations must be carried out separately by you. It is not acceptable to share a calculator
in determining the answers to questions. Note that these rules apply to ‘self marking’ questions just as much as to
questions that will be given a numerical mark.
Main Body | 1
A. Geological Structures
Structural geology
If the Earth’s crust were completely uniform and homogeneous (the same everywhere), we would have great difficulty
figuring out anything about its history. Fortunately, the Earth’s crust contains structures of many kinds. Structures are
variations in the properties of the Earth’s crust. Those variations may be:
• Spatial variations: the rocks of the Earth’s crust vary from place to place, either on the surface or below; or
• Directional variations: rocks look different when viewed from different directions.
For example, where one type of rock contacts another, there is a geological boundary, a type of structure. Geological
boundaries include:
• faults
• bedding planes
• the edges of igneous intrusions (intrusive contacts)
• ancient erosion surfaces (unconformities)
You should have heard about all these types of boundary in your introductory courses. All these boundaries tell you
something about the geological history of the area where they are found.
Even without looking at boundaries, you may be able to see structure in a rock unit: the properties of many rocks vary
with direction because the mineral grains are aligned with one another: we say the rock has fabric, another type of
structure.
A. Geologic Structures | 3
Figure 2. Microscopic thin section of a rock with fabric ( field of view 5
mm). The small dark minerals with a strong alignment are biotite mica.
Larger grey minerals are mostly the aluminum-rich minerals staurolite
and garnet. Light minerals are quartz and feldspar.
Such structures can tell us a great deal about the history of the Earth, and are critical for those seeking resources such
as water, petroleum, and minerals.
Some geological structures formed at the same time as the rocks in which they are found. These are primary structures.
Examples of primary structures include beds and laminae in sedimentary rocks like sandstone, or shale, and lava pillows
in extrusive igneous rocks like basalt. In general, you will learn most about primary structures in courses that deal
with the formation of various rock-types, but this introduction will cover some of the more important types of primary
structure, especially those that are important in figuring out Earth history.
Many structures are formed long after the rocks in which they are found. These are secondary structures. Secondary
structures include folds, fractures, foliations in metamorphic rocks, and a host of other features. Most secondary
structures are products of deformation – the movement of parts of the crust relative to one another. Structural geology
is mainly concerned with secondary structures, and therefore is mostly about the deformation of the Earth.
Tectonics is a closely related term to structural geology. Originally, tectonics referred to the mathematical and
geometrical description of geological structures at quite small scales. However, in the 1960’s it was found that large-
scale movements of the outer part of the Earth (the lithosphere) could be described by quite simple mathematical and
geometrical methods, and plate tectonics was born. Since then, the term tectonics has mainly referred to the study of
large-scale movements of the lithosphere and the structures that these have produced.
Structural analysis
The Earth’s crust contains structures almost everywhere, and the aims of structural geology are to document and
understand these structures. In general, work in structural geology is targeted at three different aims, or levels of
understanding.
4 | A. Geologic Structures
• Descriptive or Geometric analysis – what are the positions, orientations, sizes and shapes of structures that exist
in the Earth’s crust at the present day?
• Kinematic analysis – what changes in position, orientation, size, and shape occurred between the formation of the
rocks and their present-day configuration? Together, these changes are called deformation. Changes in size and
shape are called strain; strain analysis is a special part of kinematic analysis.
• Dynamic analysis – what forces operated and how much energy was required to deform the rocks into their
present configuration? Most often in dynamic analysis we are interested in how concentrated the forces were.
Stress, or force per unit area, is a common measure of force concentration used in dynamic analysis.
It is important to keep these three distinct. In particular, make sure you can describe structures first, before attempting
to figure out what moved where, and avoid jumping to conclusions about force or stress without first understanding
both the geometry and the kinematics of the situation.
Much of this book will focus on the descriptive or geometric objective, which is a foundation for further understanding.
Once you have thoroughly described structures, you will be able to proceed to kinematic and sometimes dynamic
conclusions.
Scale
Structural geologists look at structures at a variety of scales, ranging from features that affect only a few atoms
within mineral grains, to structures that cross whole continents. It’s convenient to recognize three different scales of
observation.
• Microscopic structures are those that require optical assistance to make them visible.
• Mesoscopic, or outcrop-scale structures are visible in one view at the Earth’s surface without
optical assistance.
• Macroscopic, or map-scale structures are too big to see in one view. They must be mapped to make them visible,
or imaged from an aircraft or a satellite.
Geological maps
One powerful representation of the geometry of rock structures is a geological, or geologic map. Geological maps
are created through the process of mapping in which outcrops are visited in the course of fieldwork, described, and
recorded on a topographic base map. The result is an outcrop map in which the observed rock types and structures
are recorded. In most areas, there will be gaps between the observed outcrops, where the bedrock is obscured by soil,
vegetation, or other types of overburden.
To make a geological map, some interpretation is necessary, in order to fill in the areas between the outcrops. In
most cases, some understanding of geological processes is required in order to come up with an interpretation. Figure
3a shows an outcrop map, and Fig. 3b shows an attempt at a geological map made without much understanding of
geological processes. Although it satisfies the observations in a simplistic way, it is unlikely to be correct. Figure 3c is a
more likely interpretation, made with some understanding of geological processes. Note that this, second version leads
to some kinematic interpretations. We can infer that perhaps parallel units B, C and D represent sedimentary layers, and
unit A is perhaps a younger intrusion because it cross-cuts them.
A. Geologic Structures | 5
Figure 3. (a) An outcrop map with (b) an unlikely interpretation and (c) a more likely interpretation, producing a reasonable geological
map.
6 | A. Geologic Structures
B. Orientation of Structures
Almost all work on geologic structures is concerned in one way or another with lines and planes.
The following are examples of linear features that one might observe in rocks, together with some kinematic deductions
from them:
Notice that although several of the above descriptive observations lead to kinematic inferences, only the last one allows
us to make dynamic conclusions!
Bearings
To describe almost any structure, we need to say something about its orientation (also known as its attitude): Does it
run north-south, or perhaps east-west, or somewhere in between? A direction relative to north is called a bearing. In
most geologic work, bearings are specified as azimuths.
An azimuth of 000° represents north, 087° is just a shade north of east, 225° represents southwest, and 315° represents
NW.
B. Orientation of Structures | 7
Figure 1: Compass used to measure an azimuth – in this case the strike of a
bedding plane.
Notice that it is best to use a three digit number for azimuths. This helps to avoid confusion with inclinations (below).
The degree symbol is often omitted when recording large numbers of azimuths.
Confusingly, there are other methods of specifying an azimuth. In the United States, bearings are often specified using
quadrants.
In the quadrants method of measuring bearings, angles are measured starting at either due north or due south
(whichever is closest), and measured by counting degrees toward the east or west.
Here are the four azimuths above, converted to the quadrants representation:
000° N00E
087° N87E
225° S45W
315° N45W
Because it is more confusing, especially when doing calculations, we will not use the quadrants method much in
this manual. However, you need to be prepared to understand measurements recorded as quadrants, especially when
reading books and geologic reports published in the U.S.
Azimuths are typically measured with a compass, which uses the Earth’s magnetic field as a reference direction. In most
parts of the Earth, the magnetic field is not aligned exactly north-south.
Magnetic declination varies from place to place and varies slowly over time. Currently (2020) the declination in
Edmonton is about 014°.
Most geological compasses have a mechanism for compensating for declination. Of course, the compass must be
adjusted for the particular area in which you are working.
8 | B. Orientation of Structures
Inclinations
A horizontal line has an inclination of 00°, and a vertical one is inclined 90°. Always use two digits for inclination, to
distinguish inclinations from azimuths (three digits).
Inclinations are measured using a device called a clinometer or inclinometer. Geological compasses typically have a
built-in clinometer, so one instrument can be used for measuring both types of angle. However, you must hold the
compass differently in each case:
To measure an azimuth precisely, using the Earth’s magnetic field, you must hold the compass horizontal;
To measure an inclination, you are using the Earth’s gravity field, and the compass must be held in a vertical plane.
Orientation of a line
To specify the orientation of a line requires two measurements, called plunge and trend:
B. Orientation of Structures | 9
Figure 3: Trend and plunge of a linear geological feature.
So, a line with plunge 07 and trend 007 slopes downward very gently in a direction just east of north. 227-87 specifies a
line that plunges very steeply towards the SW.
There are several different conventions for writing plunge and trend measurements: some geologists write the plunge
first and some write it second. The best way to keep things clear is to always use three digits for the trend and two for
the plunge. In addition, it’s sometimes helpful to specify the compass direction, just as a check, e.g.
025-37 NE
Orientation of a plane
To specify the orientation of a plane, we also need two measurements, an azimuth and an inclination. The dip of a plane
is its inclination. It’s important when measuring dip to measure the steepest possible slope in the plane. If you are in
doubt, imagine water running down the surface; it will take the steepest path, in the direction of dip.
The dip of a plane is the inclination of the steepest line in the plane.
The azimuth of a plane is a bit more complicated. There are several different directions that we might measure. If we
measure the direction in which the plane slopes downhill, then we are measuring dip direction.
The dip direction of the plane is the azimuth of the steepest line in the plane.
However, dip direction is not easy to measure accurately with many compasses, because the slope of the plane varies
rather gradually on either side of the dip direction. For this reason, many geologists prefer to measure the strike, which
refers to the direction of a horizontal line drawn on the surface.
The strike of a plane is the azimuth of a horizontal line that lies in the plane.
10 | B. Orientation of Structures
Figure 4. Strike, dip, and dip-direction of a plane.
There are two directions in which we could measure the strike, 180° apart! The dip direction is clockwise from one, and
counterclockwise from the other. In most Canadian geological field work, the right-hand rule (‘RHR‘) is used to avoid
this ambiguity.
Right-hand rule: When you are facing in the strike direction, the plane dips downward to your right.
An equivalent statement is that strike is always 90° counter-clockwise from the dip direction.
It’s a good idea to add a rough compass direction to the dip measurement, just as a check that right-hand rule
measurement has been done correctly. For example:
345/45 NE
specifies a plane that dips at 45° with strike roughly NNW. The dip direction is clockwise from the strike, so the dip
direction is ENE – but ‘NE’ indicates that we have the direction right.
Some geologists prefer to record whichever strike direction is less than 180, and use letters (e.g. ‘NE’) to resolve the
ambiguity. In this convention (‘strike, dip, alphabetic dip direction’) the above measurement would be written:
165/45 NE
Other geologists prefer to record dip direction and dip. In the ‘dip-direction, dip’ (DDD) convention, the above
measurement would be written:
B. Orientation of Structures | 11
075,45
In the UK the strike has sometimes been specified so that the dip direction is counterclockwise from the strike, though
confusingly this convention is also called ‘right-hand rule’. If you want to know the logic for this convention, ask a British
geologist! (It has nothing to do with driving on the left side of the road.) In this convention, our plane would be:
165/45
In most work for this course, planes will be specified using the (Canadian) right-hand rule. However, you should be
prepared, as geologists, to work with data collected using any of the other conventions.
Often it’s possible to measure several different linear and planar structures at a single outcrop. Sometimes there are
special relationships between these structures. The following sections describe some of these relationships.
Intersecting planes
Figure 5: Two examples of intersecting geologic planes. In (a) a dipping plane (stippled) intersects with a vertical plane (shaded) to produce
a plunging line of intersection. In (b) neither plane is vertical.
If two planar structures have different orientations, they will intersect in space. The intersection of two non-parallel
planes defines a line (Fig 5). The orientation of the intersection line depends only on the orientation of the two planes. (If
we change the position of one or both planes but keep their orientation constant, the location of the line of intersection
will change, but not its orientation.) There are many situations that you will meet in this manual where planes intersect.
The following are particularly important:
• The intersection of a geological surface with the topographic surface (the ground) is called the surface trace or
outcrop trace (or just trace) of that surface. Geological maps are typically divided into areas of different colours
(for different rock units) that are bounded by lines; these lines on the map are the traces of the geological surfaces
12 | B. Orientation of Structures
that separate the units.
• The intersection of a fault plane with a planar rock unit that the fault displaces produces a line called the fault cut-
off or cutoff.
• The two sides, or limbs, of a fold may intersect on a line called the fold hinge.
• The truncation, at an unconformity, of an older planar rock unit or surface by a younger one with a different
orientation in space produces a line which may be called the subcrop, or subcrop limit.
On any given plane, it’s possible to draw an infinite number of lines that are parallel to, or ‘lie in‘, the plane. Some
examples are current lineations that lie in bedding planes, and striations on fault planes that lie in the fault plane itself.
The orientation of a line that lies in a plane may be specified by rake or pitch. Unlike an azimuth (which is measured from
north in a horizontal plane) or an inclination (which is measured from horizontal in a vertical plane) a rake is measured
from horizontal in an inclined plane as shown in Fig. 6. As with strike, there are several conventions for specifying rake.
We recommend measuring the rake of a line from the ‘right-hand rule’ strike direction, clockwise when looking down
on the surface, as an angle between 000° and 180°.
On a vertical plane the rake of a line is the same as its plunge. On all other planes, rake ≥ plunge.
Remember:it only makes sense to measure a rake when a line lies in a plane.
B. Orientation of Structures | 13
Pole to a plane
There’s also an infinite number of other lines are not parallel to any given plane (they may pierce the plane). One special
line is perpendicular to any given plane: it’s sometimes called the pole to the plane. We will meet poles to planes in a
later section of the course.
Contours
Contours are curving lines on a map that are widely used in the Earth sciences to show the variation of some quantity
over the Earth’s surface. You are probably most familiar with topographic contours that show the shape of the land
surface. However, Earth science uses many other types of contours such as:
In each of these cases a numerical quantity, such as the elevation of a surface, varies from place to place, and the contour
lines illustrate that spatial variation.
A contour is a curving line on a map that separates higher values of some quantity from lower values.
14 | B. Orientation of Structures
A contour can also be thought of as a line connecting points at which the measured quantity has constant value. Each
contour line is labelled with this constant value; a map covered with contour lines is a useful expression of the spatial
variation of the measured quantity.
(Note: This property is sometimes used as a definition of a contour. For example, a topographic contour is sometimes
defined ‘as a line joining points of equal elevation‘. Although this is a satisfactory definition, it is harder to apply in
practice, for two reasons. First, when the data are sparse, for example when working with drilled wells, it may be difficult
to find any points of exactly equal elevation; locating such points requires interpolation. Second, it is very easy, when
threading contours, to end up with “lower” points on both sides of the same contour line. This is always wrong! So, it
is imperative when drawing a contour to remember that it has a ‘high’ side and a ‘low’ side, so that it always separates
higher and lower values.)
Often, the measured quantity is the elevation of the Earth’s surface, above or below sea level. A topographic contour
can be considered as a line on the ground separating points of higher and lower elevation. It can also be thought of as
the line of intersection of the ground surface with a horizontal plane. Below sea level, contours showing the elevation
of the sea floor are known as bathymetric contours.
On most topographic maps, topographic contours are separated by a constant interval: for example, contours on a map
might be drawn at 310, 320, 330, 340 m etc. The spacing of the contours is called the contour interval. In this example
the contour interval is 10 m.
A structure contour (Fig. 8) is a contour line on a geologic surface, such as the top or bottom of a rock formation, a
fault, or an unconformity. Typically, structure contours are drawn on surfaces that are buried underground. However,
sometimes it’s possible to guess where a geologic surface was before it was eroded away; structure contours are then
drawn for this imaginary surface above ground! Just like a topographic contour, a structure contour is the line of
intersection of the contoured surface with a horizontal plane.
B. Orientation of Structures | 15
Figure 8. Relationship between dip and contour spacing.
Because structure contours are by definition lines of constant elevation, they are parallel to the strike of the geologic
surface. They are sometimes called strike lines. So, given a pattern of structure contours it’s possible to determine the
strike of the surface at any point.
The dip of the surface controls how far apart the contours are. Where a surface dips steeply, the contours are close
together; where the surface is near-horizontal the contours are far apart. The horizontal spacing of contours, recorded
on the map is called the contour spacing. There is a simple relationship between the dip δ of a surface and the spacing
of its contours.
If a surface is planar (i.e. the strike and dip are constant) then the contours will be parallel, equally spaced, straight lines.
Thus you can readily determine the orientation of a surface from the azimuth and spacing of its structure contours.
16 | B. Orientation of Structures
Contours and outcrop traces
Figure 9. Map showing topographic contours and the outcrop trace of a single geological surface.
On a geologic map, a geologic surface such as the boundary between two map-units appears as a line, called the
outcrop trace or topographic trace of that boundary (Fig. 9). Typically, the outcrop traces of geological units are quite
complicated, curving lines, because they are affected both by the dip of the geologic surface and the complex shape of
the topographic surface. Because of this, in areas of topographic relief, it’s often possible to use the outcrop trace of a
boundary between two rock units to make inferences about the strike and dip of the units.
The precise orientation of a surface can be determined from its outcrop trace because its position and elevation are
known at every point where the trace crosses a topographic contour line. These intersection points can be used for
drawing structure contours (Fig. 10). Thus, for example, the 400 m structure contour is constructed by connecting all
points where the outcrop trace crosses the 400 m topographic contour. Once a number of structure contours have been
drawn, the orientation of the surface may be determined from the spacing and orientation of the structure contours.
B. Orientation of Structures | 17
Figure 10. Structure contour construction on the map in Fig. 9. The strike and dip of the surface can be determined from the contour
orientation and spacing. In this case, the structure contours are oriented 65° from north, but the numbers on the contours tell us that the
surface gets lower towards the NW, so the RHR strike is: 65° + 180° = 245°. The structure contours are 125 m apart and the contour
interval is 100 m. Dip = arctan(100/125) = 39°. Therefore the RHR orientation of the surface is: 245/39 NW
Conversely, if structure contours of a geologic surface are known, its trace can be determined by connecting points
where the geologic and topographic surfaces have the same elevation; i.e. the trace connects points where structure and
topographic contours with the same elevation cross one another.
Where the elevation of a structure contour is greater than topographic elevation, this means the geological surface is
“above ground”, and has thus been removed by erosion at that location. Conversely, where the elevation of a structure
contour is less than topographic elevation, this means the geological surface is below ground, or in the subsurface, and
can be encountered by excavation or drilling. The outcrop trace of a geological surface can thus be thought of as a line
that separates a region where that surface is present below ground, from another region where the surface has been
eroded away above the present-day ground.
18 | B. Orientation of Structures
Figure 11. Sketch maps and block diagrams showing the outcrop traces (dashed lines) of geological surfaces of different orientation: (a) Dip
to the east; (b) Vertical; (c) Horizontal; (d) Dip to the west; (e) Dip to the east but less steep than valley.
There are some general considerations when constructing geologic traces (Fig. 11).
• The outcrop trace of a horizontal geological surface is parallel to the topographic contours.
• The outcrop trace of a vertical geological surface is a straight line parallel to the strike; it ignores topographic
contours.
• The outcrop traces of dipping surfaces show V-shapes as they cross valleys and ridges; these regions are
particularly useful in determining strike and dip.
• In general, the V-shape formed as a trace crosses a river valley points in the direction of dip. (This is known as the
“rule of vees”.) The only exception occurs when the dip is in the same direction as the slope of the valley, but
gentler than the gradient of the river; then the V-shapes point up-dip.
• For planar surfaces with shallow dip (gentler than the typical hill slopes of topography in the region) the outcrop
trace will generally follow topographic contours quite closely, crossing them at widely spaced intervals.
• In such regions, the relative position of a top or bottom contact of a unit can be inferred from the local
topography. For example, if the position of the bottom trace of a unit is known then the top of the unit must be
exposed at a higher elevation.
A geologic trace should never cross a topographic contour except where the identical structural and topographic
contours intersect.
B. Orientation of Structures | 19
• Lab 1. Orientation of Lines and Planes
Do the questions in any order to avoid traffic congestion around the rock samples. Rock samples may not be available
outside the lab hours.
*An asterisk indicates a question for self-marking. These must be passed in for the lab to be verified as complete, but will
not be individually graded. Answers will be verified by a teaching assistant and/or posted for checking in next week’s lab.
1.* To make sure you are conversant with both the quadrant convention (widely used in the USA) and the azimuth
convention (used in Canada and most of the rest of the world) for recording bearings, translate the azimuth
convention into the quadrant convention, and vice versa, for the following bearings.
a) N12E
b) 298
c) N62W
d) S55W
2.* Rock samples containing planar structures are set up in the laboratory. (a) Using a compass-clinometer, measure
the strike of a planar structure. To do this, hold the compass in a horizontal plane so that the needle swings freely
in the Earth’s magnetic field. Then place the compass so that its horizontal edge is against the surface, keeping the
compass level. Note the reading of the compass needle (your instructors will show you how to read the particular
model of compass). (b) Now measure the dip. To do this, turn the compass so that it is in a vertical plane (the
pendulum or spirit bubble – depending on the type of compass – should swing freely in the Earth’s gravity field).
Place the compass so that its edge is in contact with the surface along the steepest slope. Read the dip (your
instructors will show you how to read the number for the particular model of compass). (c) Record the strike
(right-hand-rule) and the dip. (d) Also record the dip direction (N, S, E, W) as a check. (e) Repeat for the other
samples as directed. (Note that the answers you get will probably not be true orientations because the Earth’s
magnetic field will be distorted by metal objects in the building: in other words, the declination of the Earth’s
magnetic field is highly variable indoors.)
* When you are done, have a teaching assistant check and initial your answers.
3.* Translate the following orientation measurements from the dip-direction and dip (e.g., 060°, 45°) convention into
the North American right hand rule convention, adding an alphabetic dip direction as a check (e.g. 330°/45°NE).
a) 177°, 13°
b) 032°, 45°
c) 287°, 80°
4.* Translate the following orientation measurements from the strike, dip, and alphabetic dip-direction (e.g., 087°/
21°N) into the North American right hand rule convention.
a) 087°/21°N
c) 042°/30°SE
5.* Rock samples containing linear structures are set up in the laboratory. (a) Using a compass-clinometer, measure
the trend of a linear structure. To do this, hold the compass in a horizontal plane so that the needle swings freely
in the Earth’s magnetic field. Then place the compass so that its horizontal edge is over the plunging line, keeping
the compass level. Note the reading of the compass needle (using the same method as before). (b) Now measure
the plunge. To do this, turn the compass so that it is in a vertical plane (the pendulum or spirit bubble – depending
on the type of compass – should swing freely in the Earth’s gravity field). Place the compass so that its edge
is in contact with the line. Read the plunge (using the same method as for dip). (c) Record the plunge and the
trend. (d) Add the trend direction (N, NE, E…) as a check. (e) Repeat for the other sample(s) as directed. (Note that
the answers you get will probably not be true orientations because the Earth’s magnetic field will be distorted
by metal objects in the building: in other words, the declination of the Earth’s magnetic field is highly variable
indoors.)
6.* Topographic and geological surfaces are not always planar. When a surface is curved, the strike and dip vary from
place to place. When this happens, contouring is a good way to reveal the shape of the surface. Map 1 shows an
area of map in which the elevation has been measured at a large number of points. Place tracing paper over your
map. Using a contour interval of 100 m, thread contours through the measured points. In making your contour
map, remember the following points:
• Maps and map scales: You should be able to convert a map scale expressed as a representative fraction (e.g.
1:50,000) to a map scale expressed in metric or imperial length units (2 cm = 1 km) and draw a scale bar based
on either. You should understand topographic contours and should be able to look at a map with topographic
contours and identify hills, valleys, and predict which way streams are flowing.
• Your contour map is a hypothesis: it should be the simplest map that is consistent with the data, so your
contours should be as smooth as possible; avoid sharp bends and changes in the spacing of contours, unless
required by the data;
• Each contour has a high side and a low side. The 200 m contour (for example) separates ground that is above
200 m (on one side) from ground below 200 m (on the other);
• Contours can never branch;
• Rivers flow at the lowest point of a valley and must always flow downhill in the same direction.
7.Map 2 shows the configuration of the topographic surface and the trace of the top surface of a unit of banded iron
formation. Determine the orientation of the surface, and shade the area of the map where the iron formation
crops out.
8.* Map 3 shows the same area as Map 1. Place the contour map you made in the earlier question over Map 3 to
compare the contours. If there are differences, try to evaluate whether the two interpretations are equally valid.
Show with dashed lines any places where you think changes to your map are required by the data
9.A thin coal seam was observed at point X on Map 3. Unlike the topographic surface, it is perfectly planar; the
orientation is everywhere 010°/14°. Determine the spacing and orientation of the structure contours, and draw
this second set of contours on Map 3.
In sedimentary rocks, primary structures are all-important clues to the environment of formation. The study of
sedimentary structures is a main focus of courses in sedimentology. Here we will make a survey the most important
sedimentary structures with an emphasis on the ones most useful to structural geologists. Sometimes these structures
give information on things like whether the rocks have been turned upside down since their formation, so it’s important
for structural geologists, stratigraphers, and paleontologists to recognize and understand them.
In igneous rocks, primary structures are also important: they can tell you whether an igneous body is intrusive or
extrusive, for example.
Both sedimentary and extrusive igneous rocks are often stratified: they are organized in layers (strata) that were
originally horizontal. By measuring their orientation and order of formation, structural geologists gather information
about Earth history. When strata are thick they show up on geologic maps as distinct units, called formations, groups,
members etc. The study of the organisation of strata is stratigraphy.
Basics
Many sedimentary, and some igneous rocks are stratified: formed in layers (strata) laid down parallel with the Earth’s
surface (principle of original horizontality) and with the oldest on the bottom, youngest on the top (principle of
superposition). Stratified units dominate many geological maps. They are conventionally shown in different colours.
C. Primary Structures | 25
Figure 1. Cross-section and map view showing how the relationship between older and younger units develops for inliers
and outliers. Oldest unit is 1, youngest is 3. Inlier of 1 is exposed through overlying unit 2 and thus surrounded by it in map
view.
Sometimes the combination of topography and geology can produce map patterns that are quite complicated, with
patches of one unit surrounded by others. An inlier is an exposure of older strata surrounded by younger, whereas
an outlier is an exposure or erosional remnant of younger strata that are completely surrounded by older. These
relationships are indicated in Figure 1, which represents an eroded succession of strata; unit 1 is the oldest and 3 is
youngest.
Stratigraphic units
Formations
The primary unit of mapping in stratified rocks is the formation. One of the first jobs in mapping a new area is to define
formations.
26 | C. Primary Structures
Other rules for defining formations are contained in the North American Stratigraphic Code and the International
stratigraphic code.
Smaller mappable units may sometimes be recognized within formations. These are known as members.
Formations, groups, and members are all lithostratigraphic units. This means that they are based on lithological
characteristics alone; age is not part of the definition.
Thickness calculations
Measured sections, showing the thicknesses of strata in a column format, are used often in stratigraphy and
sedimentology. When strata are well exposed, it’s possible to measure the thickness of each bed with a tape measure.
However, it’s often necessary to measure diagonally across dipping strata, so apparent thicknesses must be corrected
for the difference between the measured direction and the direction that’s perpendicular to strata (called the pole to
bedding).
There are numerous trigonometric formulas to convert true thickness to apparent thickness for different combinations
of dipping planes and plunging lines of section. However, all are variations on a single basic formula.
where θ is the angle between the line of section and the ‘ideal’ direction represented by the pole to stratification. This
angle can easily be determined from a stereographic projection, which we will cover in the next section.
Unconformities
Unconformities are ancient surfaces of erosion and/or non-deposition that indicate a gap or hiatus in the stratigraphic
record. An unconformity may be represented on a map by a different type of line from that used for other geological
contacts; in a cross-section an unconformity is often shown by a wavy or crenulated line.
Subtle unconformities are very important in the analysis of sedimentary successions. A sequence is a package of
strata bounded both above and below by unconformities. It may be that an unconformity is a sequence boundary,
but that determination depends on finding another unconformity in the succession, either higher up or lower down
stratigraphically.
C. Primary Structures | 27
Figure 2. Unconformities. Block diagram of an angular
unconformity (UU’), a disconformity (DD’), and a
nonconformity (NN’).
Angular unconformities
An angular unconformity is characterized by an angular discordance, a difference of strike or dip or both, between
older strata below and younger strata above (Fig. 2a). In the diagram, the younger strata are horizontal. However,
subsequent tilting of the entire succession could alter the orientations, but there will still be a discordance between
strata above and below the unconformity. Bedding in the younger sequence tends to be parallel to the plane of
unconformity, or nearly so.
Structure contours on the younger strata above the unconformity will not have the same orientation and spacing as
those on the older strata below; either the strike or the dip, or both, will be different.
28 | C. Primary Structures
Figure 3. Angular unconformity, sandstone and conglomerate Figure 4. Close-up of the same angular unconformity at beach
(top of cliff) of the Triassic Fundy Group resting on near level, Whale Cove, Nova Scotia.
vertical mudstone and sandstone of the Carboniferous Horton
Group, Rainy Cove, Nova Scotia.
Disconformities
C. Primary Structures | 29
Nonconformities
In many cases, angular unconformities can be recognized from geologic maps. The succession above the unconformity
typically shows strata that are approximately parallel to the unconformity, whereas the rocks that underlie the
unconformity are sharply cut off at the boundary.
30 | C. Primary Structures
Figure 7. Geological map that includes an unconformity.
In a sedimentary succession containing an unconformity, the beds may show either onlap or overstep or both (Fig. 8).
In that part of the succession above an unconformity, younger beds onlap the succession below if successively younger
beds extend farther geographically onto the unconformity surface. The onlap relationship is generally produced by
progressive burial of topography by a process called transgression (defined as landward movement of the shoreline).
Overstep is a relationship involving strata below the unconformity, and describe the way the younger succession rests
on a variety of units in the lower succession. In Figure 8, Y and Z onlap the unconformity, and Y oversteps from R onto S
and T.
C. Primary Structures | 31
Figure 8. Cross-section of an angular unconformity UU`, showing onlap and overstep. Unit X is impermeable, but unit Q is
porous, and contains a petroleum reservoir in a subcrop trap.
If exposures of rock at the present-day erosion surface are referred to as outcrops, then rocks that were exposed at
ancient erosion surfaces that are now buried are referred to as subcrops. Buried surfaces of erosion are unconformities,
so subcrops represent those rocks directly below an unconformity. If we strip away all the rocks above an unconformity,
we can produce a map of the subcropping units, which would be a paleogeologic map. In effect, it is a map of the geology
as a prehistoric geologist would have recorded it just before renewed deposition began to bury the ancient erosion
surface. In the cross-section of Figure 8, a paleogeologic map showing the distribution of rocks prior to deposition of
units X-Z would show the eroded exposure of the folded succession P-T. In Figure 9, the subcropping units are shown
“greyed out” below the unconformably overlying succession.
The intersection of a plane representing the erosion surface and a geological surface below the unconformity is the
subcrop limit of that older surface. It can easily be determined by finding the intersections between corresponding
structure contours on the unconformity and the older surface. The subcrop limit is the boundary between a region
where the older surface is preserved below the unconformity, and a region where it was eroded. In the first region,
the unconformity structure contours are higher than the older surface; in the second, the structure contours on the
unconformity show it is lower.
In practical terms, there are many hydrocarbon traps at subcrop limits of reservoir rocks below angular unconformities
in the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin. Lighter oil and gas migrate in the up-dip direction through buried reservoirs,
until they encounter impermeable younger rocks above an unconformity. The search for such an occurrence is called a
subcrop play in the petroleum industry.
32 | C. Primary Structures
Figure 9. Same geological map as in Fig. 7, but with units above the unconformity (red) shown partially transparent, revealing the
subcrops of older units below.
C. Primary Structures | 33
Primary structures in sedimentary rocks
Stratification
Strata are often seen at outcrop scale too, and are one of the main characteristics that allow us to recognize sedimentary
rocks.
Layers thicker than 1 cm are known as beds. A layer thinner than this is a lamina (plural laminae).
Several sedimentary processes (storms, turbidity currents) suspend large amounts of sediment in a sudden event, and
allow it to settle out slowly, producing a graded bed with a sharp base, above which the grain-size progressively fines
upward. Graded beds are useful indicators of younging direction: i.e. in highly deformed rocks, they indicate whether
or not the strata are overturned. However, graded beds must be used with caution because there are sedimentary
processes that can produce inverse grading. For example, densely moving masses of colliding grains, avalanching down
a steep slope, tend to interact so that the large grains rise to the top. Therefore graded bedding should only be used as
a way-up indicator if it is seen multiple times in a succession of strata.
We have already mentioned graded bedding as an indicator of way-up, or younging direction. Many other sedimentary
structures can be used as way-up indicators.
Amongst the most useful is cross-stratification. Cross-stratification results from the migration of bedforms during
sedimentation. Bedforms are waves on the bedding surface produced by the action of either currents or waves.
Bedforms are generally classified into larger forms, called dunes, and smaller types called ripples. By convention:
Cross-stratification indicates way-up most effectively because it produces truncations of laminae, that resemble small-
scale angular unconformities. The laminae that are truncated are always below the truncation surface.
Even if truncations cannot be seen, it’s sometimes possible to use cross lamination by noting that most bedforms have
ridges that are sharper – more pointed – than the troughs. However, in deformed rocks it’s sometimes the case that
the curvature of surfaces is modified. Truncations therefore give a more certain indication of way-up than lamination
shape.
34 | C. Primary Structures
Figure 10. Ripples. Cambrian Gog Group, Lake Louise, Alberta. Figure 11. Dunes. Recent sediments of Kennetcook River
Estuary, Nova Scotia.
Figure 12. Cross-lamination. Carboniferous Horton Group, Figure 13. Cross-bedding. Triassic Fundy Group, Burntcoat
Tennycape, Nova Scotia. Head, Nova Scotia.
C. Primary Structures | 35
Sole markings
Sole markings are a second type of sedimentary structure that is useful for structural geologists. Sole markings are
formed when coarse sediment (usually sand) is deposited rapidly (usually by a current) on a muddy substrate. Sole
markings include:
• Groove casts: grooves are made by currents dragging objects across the mud; these are then filled by sand and
preserved as molds on the base of a sandstone bed;
• Flute casts: currents produce scoop-like depressions in the mud that fade out in a down-current direction; these
are then filled by sand and preserved as molds on the base of a sandstone bed;
• Bioturbation structures (trace fossils): horizontal burrows and trails are filled by sand and preserved as molds on
the base of a sandstone bed.
• Load structures: bulges in the bottom of a sandstone bed formed when denser sand sinks into less dense wet mud.
Note: strictly speaking, all these structures should be called molds, not casts. However, the term ‘cast’ is more commonly
used.
Figure 15. Groove casts. Cambrian Goldenville Group, Nova Figure 16. Flute casts. Cambrian Goldenville Group, Nova
Scotia. Scotia.
36 | C. Primary Structures
Structures generated by soft-sediment deformation
Recently deposited sediment may be deformed while it is unlithified. Soft-sediment deformation structures can be
challenging for the structural geologist as they are difficult to distinguish from tectonic structures, formed after the
sediment was lithified. There are a number of categories.
• Mudcracks: these are formed by shrinkage of mud as it dries out. Mudcracks are most visible when they are filled
by overlying sediment that is different. They thin downwards to a point and therefore can be good way-up
indicators.
• Load structures: bulges in the bottom of a sandstone bed formed when denser sand sinks into less dense wet mud.
Load structures also fall into the category of sole markings. Corresponding narrow tongues of mud penetrating
upward between load structures are called flame structures.
• Convolute lamination: sand that is deposited under water is often initially very loosely packed. Subsequently, the
grains may settle into a denser packing, and the water between the grains escapes upward. As this occurs, the
water may liquidize the sand. Any lamination may become deformed into complex chaotic folds. Convolute
lamination is only a good way-up indicator if it is truncated by younger laminae.
• Slump structures: sediments that are deposited on a slope may undergo catastrophic slope failure, and start to
move under the influence of gravity. Beds may become tightly folded as a result of this type of process. Slump folds
can be difficult to distinguish from tectonic folds, and are not particularly effective as way-up indicators. However,
if the way-up is known from other structures, slump folds can be used in sedimentology and basin analysis as
indicators of paleoslope.
C. Primary Structures | 37
Figure 21. Convolute
Figure 20. Load structures. Ordovician Lower Head lamination. Ordovician
Formation, Newfoundland. Eagle Island Sandstone,
Newfoundland.
Intrusions
Intrusions by their nature do not typically show stratification, and cannot usually be used to determine tilting or way-
up. However, in unravelling the structural history of a complex region, it is important to know the relative timing of
intrusions, and this is where contact relationships are all-important.
Exocontact features are formed in the host rock (also known as country rock) by the effect of an intrusion. A
metamorphic aureole (baked zone) is often recognizable from changes in texture or mineralogy. There may be minor
intrusions where magma has filled cracks branching off the main intrusion. These are called dykes (dikes in the US)
unless they are parallel to strata in the host rock, in which case they are sills.
38 | C. Primary Structures
Endocontact features are formed within an intrusion, where it comes in contact with the host rock. A chill zone is
typically finer-grained than the bulk of the intrusion. Xenoliths are pieces of host rock that broke off and are surrounded
by the intrusion.
Volcanic rocks
Volcanic rocks are typically stratified, but bedding is often much less clear than in sedimentary rocks. Sometimes the
contacts between volcanic flows are conspicuous because they are weathered. Soil layers called ‘bole’, consisting of soft,
clay-rich weathered lava are sometimes visible.
Lava erupted under water typically forms balloon-like pillows typically 0.5 – 2 m in diameter, formed by rapid chilling.
Later pillows conform in shape to those beneath them in a flow, giving a general indication of way-up.
C. Primary Structures | 39
Thick lava flows may shrink and crack as they cool, producing columnar joints. These typically form perpendicular
to the base and top of a flow. As a result, the columns are elongated in the direction of the pole to stratification and
therefore can be used to estimate the orientation of strata where bedding cannot be observed directly.
Note that columnar joints are common in sills too. Sills can be distinguished from flows only by looking at their contacts:
sills show intrusive contacts top and bottom, whereas flows typically show one weathered surface.
Figure 26. Pillow lavas. Cretaceous Troodos Massif, Cyprus. Figure 27. Columnar
joints in sill. Salisbury
Crags, Edinburgh,
Scotland.
40 | C. Primary Structures
• Lab 2. Cross-sections and Three-point Problems
Topographic profiles show the shape of the Earth’s surface in a view that simulates a vertical slice through the landscape.
Topographic profiles may be constructed by noting where topographic contours cross the line of the profile.
Figure 1. Topographic map, showing technique for drawing a topographic profile along line AB.
You may remember the technique for drawing a topographic profile from your introductory geology course (Fig. 1). On
a profile or a cross-section, the ratio of the vertical scale to the horizontal scale, expressed as a fraction, is the vertical
exaggeration. If the vertical and horizontal scales are equal the section is said to have a natural scale. Unless there is a
good reason to use vertical exaggeration, it is generally best in structural geology to draw sections at natural scale.
A vertical cross-section showing the trace of a geologic surface may be constructed in exactly the same way by noting
where structure contours cross the line of section. Where a natural scale has been used and the line of section is
perpendicular to the strike, the cross-section shows the true dip. On sections oblique to strike, the cross-section shows
the apparent dip. It is possible to demonstrate that apparent dip is always less than true dip. Figure 3 shows apparent
dip and true dip in different cross-sections.
Figure 3. Block diagram illustrating the difference between the true (t) and
apparent (a) dip of the stippled plane. Planes labelled H and V are
horizontal and vertical respectively, and right angles are labelled in the
usual way.
Three-point problems
1.* Examine the geological map of the Grand Canyon. Even without structure contours, we can make some inferences
about the orientations of different geological units.
Lab 2 Question 1. Geological Map of the Grand Canyon (Maxson 1961, USGS, 1:48000). Credit: U.S. Geological
Survey Department of the Interior/USGS U.S. Geological Survey/Published by the Grand Canyon Association. A version of
this map can also be downloaded from https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/Prodesc/proddesc_33640.htm
Look at the topographic contours and notice that their spacing varies dramatically. In some places they are
widely spaced, whereas in others they are so close together that they merge together. The steepest slopes are
typically found on particular geologic units of erosion-resistant rocks, known as ‘cliff-forming’ units.
a) Using the legend, identify and name one cliff-forming Paleozoic unit that outcrops in consistently steep
topographic slopes.
In addition to information about erosion-resistance, the map pattern carries information about the dip of units.
Based on the map pattern, what can you say about the dip of the following units? (In each case, your answer
should be something like ‘approximately horizontal’, ‘approximately vertical’, ‘dipping gently’, etc.)
In addition, the map gives you information about geologic time, both by the principle of superposition (younger
rocks on top of older) and by the principle of cross-cutting relationships (older structures are cut by younger).
An angular unconformity is a type of cross-cutting relationship where a younger unit lies on the eroded surfaces
of many different older units.
f) Look for unconformities that are visible in the map pattern and identify two. In each case, specify which
unit lies immediately above the unconformity surface. (This is the best way to specify the location of an
unconformity in a stratigraphic succession because typically a single upper unit lies on a variety of lower units).
For each unconformity, say which units of rock are overstepped, and also mention any evidence for onlap at the
unconformity surface.
g) There is at least one more unconformity on the map but it is a disconformity, so there is no cross-cutting
relationship. Using the legend and your knowledge of the geologic timescale, identify its location in the
stratigraphy.
2. Map 1 shows the trace of an unconformable contact between slate and an overlying conglomerate. Conformably
overlying the conglomerate is sandstone and limestone.
c. Draw structure contours on the remaining contacts. You may notice that some structure contours are shared
between multiple surfaces. Draw the structure contours in pencil and label each surface with a different colour.
d. Draw two vertical topographic profiles with bearings of 099o and 000o through the point P. You may remember
the technique for drawing a topographic profile from your introductory geology course. The scale of the map is
1:7500. Your topographic profiles should be drawn at natural scale (no vertical exaggeration).
e. Now add the unconformity to the topographic profile to make a cross section. To do this, use the intersections of
structure contours with the profile in exactly the same way you used the intersections of topographic contours
in the previous question! (Do not try to use the calculated dip to place the plane on the cross section; if the cross-
section is at an angle to the dip it will show an apparent dip, not a true dip. By far the easiest and most accurate
way to place surfaces on the section is by using the structure contours. Also, the contour technique always works
even if you have to construct a vertically exaggerated section.) If you do not have enough contours to constrain
the surface on the cross-section, interpolate contours at intermediate elevations (325, 350, 375 m etc.).
f. Complete the sections by adding in the remaining surfaces and shade the units with appropriate patterns.
*g. Which of the slopes of the traces of the unconformity on the above cross-sections equals the true dip and which
an apparent dip?
3. Also on Map 1 is a dotted line representing the trace of a gold-bearing vein in slates exposed on the hillside at S. A
planar gold-bearing vein was also intersected in borehole Q, 100 m below the topographic surface, and in borehole T,
300 m below the surface. Assuming all three observations are of the same gold vein, you have enough information to
determine its orientation.
b. Draw the subcrop line of the vein by finding the intersection of the two sets of structure contours.
f. * A prospector suggests drilling through the outlier at Y to look for the gold vein below the unconformity. Explain
why this suggestion would be a bad idea.
g. * The prospector then suggests drilling through the inlier at X to look for the gold vein below the unconformity.
Explain why this suggestion would also be a bad idea.
h. * Enter your answers from parts b and d in the spaces provided above the map in next week’s lab, as you will
need to use these numbers.
Introduction
Stereographic projection is a powerful method for solving geometric problems in structural geology. Unlike structure
contouring and other map-based techniques, it preserves only the orientation of lines and planes with no ability to
preserve position relationships. However, it is extremely useful, as orientation problems are very common in structural
geology. Stereographic projection has been in use since the second century B.C. and is a popular method used
by crystallographers as a tool for representing crystal form. However, there is one important difference. Whereas
crystallographers use an upper hemisphere projection, structural geologists always use the lower hemisphere. There is
a good reason for this: the lower hemisphere represents the region beneath the Earth’s surface where the rocks have
not yet been eroded away. However, if you have already met the stereographic projection in mineralogy, the lower
hemisphere may take a little getting used to. Try to imagine that you are looking down into a bowl-shaped depression
in the Earth’s surface. The on-line visualization tool at https://app.visiblegeology.com/stereonet.html may also help.
Stereogram basics
The stereonet may be reinforced with card to extend its life. It is convenient to place an old-fashioned thumb tack
through the centre of the net. Protect yourself and others from the thumb tack by keeping it embedded in an eraser
while not in use. There are several varieties of stereonet available. We will start with a Wulff net, which is used for
the construction of the true, or equal-angle stereographic projection. In later labs we will use a Schmidt net, which
constructs an equal-area projection.
D. Stereographic Projection | 47
Principle of stereographic projection
48 | D. Stereographic Projection
Features of the net
Figure 4. Block diagram and stereographic projection of a plane and its pole.
D. Stereographic Projection | 49
Two applications of the stereographic projection
In lab 2 you encountered the terms ‘true dip’ and ‘apparent dip’. Refer back to lab 2 if you need to remind yourself of the
difference. In principle, it’s possible to make conversions between true and apparent dip by trigonometry. However, it’s
generally much easier to make the conversion using the stereographic projection. The construction is shown in Fig. 5.
Figure 5. Converting between true and apparent dip with the stereographic projection.
A common problem in stratigraphy is to determine the true thickness of a formation. True thickness is measured
perpendicular to the plane of bedding. Often, in the field or in a subsurface well, an apparent thickness is measured –
one that is oblique to bedding, and therefore overestimates the true thickness (Fig. 6). There are many trigonometric
methods for calculating true thickness, depending on the exact circumstances of measurement. However, one method
using the stereographic projection works every time: multiply the apparent thickness by the cosine of the angle (θ)
between the pole to bedding and the line of measurement (the trend and plunge of the traverse, tape measure, or
whatever measuring device was used).
50 | D. Stereographic Projection
Figure 6. Calculating the true thickness of a carbonate unit, using measured apparent thickness and
the pole to bedding. True thickness = Measured thickness × cos(θ).
D. Stereographic Projection | 51
• Lab 3. Working with Stereographic Projections
You will need a Wullf net. You can download one here: WULFF NET 15 cm.
For use in this course, your net must be 15 cm in diameter. If you download your own, print the Wullf net on a plain sheet
of paper at at 100% scale. (Many computers will automatically shrink the image to fit a smaller paper area by default. Use
the options in the printer dialog on your computer to print at 100%.)
Next, use an an old fashioned thumb tack to make a small hole through the exact centre of the net. Then insert the
tack pointing upwards, through the hole.
Now, take a sheet of tracing paper, and press it over the net so that the thumb tack makes a neat hole in the centre.
Then, trace the circular outline, the edge of the net, known as the primitive, on the tracing paper. Mark the four cardinal
1
points N, E, S, W, on the tracing paper You will sometimes see nets which have been labelled with N, S, E and W. We do
not recommend this, as the net is rotated, during use, into a variety of orientions that are not N-S. Where necessary, we
refer to the cardinal points of the net as 'top', 'left, 'bottom' and 'right'. with small ‘ticks’, and distinguish N with an arrow.
You should now be able to rotate your projection (on the tracing paper) over the net, and then return it to the starting
position with N at the top.
The simplest geometric information one can display on a stereographic projection is the orientation of a vertical line. It
projects as a point in the middle of the stereonet. The next easiest information to portray is the orientation of a line that
has a trend due north or due south. With the overlay in the reference position, count the amount of plunge from either
the north or south index mark (as appropriate) on the primitive towards the center of the net along the N-S line, and
place a dot on the tracing paper at this position. Remember, a line is represented by a point on the stereogram.
a) Visualize the problem first, using a pencil. Imagine that the pencil originates at the centre of the net, and extends
downward to intersect a “bowl” below the net. In which quadrant will it intersect the hemisphere, and whether it will
be close to the primitive or far away?
b) With the overlay in the reference position, make a mark on the primitive that corresponds to the trend of the line.
1.
d) Return the overlay to the reference position and check that the cross is in the expected general position.
Figure 1. Procedure for plotting the stereographic projection of a plunging line. Plunge of 38 and trend of 222. Tracing paper shown grey.
Example problem: Plot the point L representing the line 300-50. On your projection label the angles corresponding to the
trend and plunge.
Horizontal and vertical planes are straightforward to plot. A horizontal plane is represented by the primitive. N-S and
E-W striking vertical planes are represented by the straight lines on the stereonet connecting the N-S poles and E-W
positions, respectively. Other vertical planes are straight diameters oriented parallel to the strike.
a) Visualize the problem using your hand or a piece of paper. Imagine that this plane object passes through the centre
of the plot and intersects a hemisphere below the net. In which quadrants will the curved line of intersection lie, and
how close to the primitive will that curve be? Where will its pole be? The pole should be on the opposite side of the
net. If the great circle is near the primitive then the pole will be near the centre, and vice versa.
b) With the overlay in the reference position make a mark on the primitive that corresponds to the strike direction of
the plane. As a matter of sound practice, you should always make this mark on the strike direction according to the
right hand rule.
c) Rotate the stereonet until the mark is aligned with the top point on the net. From the right hand side of the net,
count degrees inward along the straight radius, until you reach the amount of dip. Trace the great circle which passes
through this point; optionally, to plot the pole to the plane, count the same number of degrees outward from the
centre along the straight radius towards the left side of the net and mark a small ‘x’.
d) Return the overlay to the reference position and check that the great circle corresponds with the anticipated
orientation.
Example problem: Construct the great circle representing the plane 120/50, and its pole. On the projection label the angles
corresponding to the plane’s strike, dip and numerical dip direction.
a) Plot the plane as a great circle following steps a-c of the previous procedure.
b) From the top point of the net, count degrees along the great circle you have just traced until you reach the desired
angle of rake.
Finding the orientation of a line from its pole is just the reverse of the plotting procedure above.
a) Rotate the net to place the pole on any of the four straight radii. Mark a point on the primitive at the end of this
straight radius.
b) Count degrees of plunge inward from the primitive until you come to the pole. Record the plunge.
c) Return the net to the reference position. Count degrees clockwise round the primitive until you come to the mark
made in step a. This is the trend.
Example problem: measure the orientation of the line you plotted in the first example and see if you get the answer you
started with!
Measuring the strike and dip of a plane from its great circle
Measuring the strike and dip represented by a great circle is just the reverse of the plotting procedure for a plane.
a) Rotate the net until the plane is on a great circle on the right hand half of the net. (This ensures an answer consistent
with right-hand rule.)
b) Mark the end of the great circle that is at the top of the net.
c) Count degrees of dip inward from the right hand side along the straight radius until you come to the great circle.
d) Return to reference position and note the azimuth of the mark made in step b. This is the strike.
A pole is perpendicular to the plane it represents, so steps a and c are done in a way that seems opposite to the
procedure when working with a great circle, or trace!
a) Rotate the net until the pole is on the straight radius on the left side of the net.
b) Mark the end of the great circle that is at the top of the net.
c) Count degrees of dip outward from the centre along the straight radius toward the left hand side of the net until you
come to the pole.
d) Return to reference position and note the azimuth of the mark made in b. This is the strike.
Example problem: measure the orientation of the plane you plotted in the first example by working backwards from its
pole and see if you get the answer you started with!
b) Rotate the net so that both poles lie on a single great circle.
For any two differently oriented lines, there will be a third line
Figure 3. Calculations involving lines.
that is perpendicular to both of them.
It’s possible to measure the angle between the two lines by counting 2-degree squares along the great circle that passes
through both.
c) Count degrees along the great circle between the two lines.
Note that, unless the lines are at 90°, there will always be two answers: one greater than 90° and one less than 90°.
Example problem: Construct the plane common to the lines 318-34 and 206-78; determine the angle between them;
also determine the strike and dip of the common plane.
b) Repeat step b above, but instead of determining the trend and plunge, move the point of intersection to the straight
radius on the left side of the net.
c) Count the number of degrees outward from the centre of the net, along the left straight radius to this point.
d) Count the same number of degrees inward from the primitive along the right straight radius, and trace the great circle
that passes through this point.
There are several methods to find the angle between a pair of planes. It is possible to measure the angle between the
two great circles with a protractor, but this is not very accurate. Two methods are recommended. The first method is
easier to visualize, but the second method is quicker. Use whichever you prefer.
First method
a-d) Find the great circle perpendicular to the two planes as above.
e) Locate the point where each original plane intersects the new great circle.
f) Count the number of degrees along the new great circle between these points.
b) Rotate the net so that both poles lie on a single great circle.
Important note: there are always two possible answers to the angle between two planes. The two angles will add up to
180°. The only way to figure out which one is the right answer to a given geological problem is to visualize the problem
in 3D!
Example problem: Plot the line of intersection of the planes 132/22 and 074/68. Also plot a third plane perpendicular
to both, and find the angle between the two planes. Determine the orientation of the line of intersection of the first two
planes. Determine the orientation of the perpendicular plane.
1) Plot the point L representing the line 300-50. On your projection label the angles corresponding to the trend and plunge.
2) Construct the great circle representing the plane 120/50, and its pole. On the projection label the angles corresponding
to the plane’s strike, dip and numerical dip direction.
4) Construct the plane common to the lines 318-34 and 206-78; determine the angle between them; also determine the strike
and dip of the common plane.
Assignment
1. *Plot and label the position of the following lineations on a stereographic projection:
2. *On a separate sheet of tracing paper plot and label the position of the following inclined planes and their poles:
(a) Measure the strike and dip of the foliation, and the plunge and trend of the lineation with a compass/clinometer.
(b) Test your accuracy by plotting both on a stereographic projection. First, plot the foliation as a great circle on a
stereographic projection. Next, plot the plunge and trend of the lineation as a point. If your lineation lies on the
great circle exactly, your measurement is excellent! More likely, it will fall a little off, reflecting the difficulty of
measuring with total precision.
c) Measure the rake of the lineation with a protractor. Now plot the rake measurement, as a point that lies exactly
on the great circle. Measure the angle between the two measurements of the lineation. This is an indication of
the precision of your measurements.
d) Use the result to rate your compass use. (Be honest – this is about assessing your own precision correctly, not
the initial measurement!)
Error Rating
2-5° Good
5°-10° Satisfactory
4. Along a vertical railroad cutting, a bed shows an apparent dip of 20° in a direction 298°. On level ground outside
the cutting a geologist can measure the strike of the beds as 067, but cannot tell which way they are dipping. Use
stereographic projection to determine the true, right-hand-rule strike and dip of the bed.
6. The map you worked on last week contains a gold vein cut by an unconformity. Determine the orientation of the
subcrop of the vein, by stereographic projection.
(a) Plot the orientation of the gold vein as a great circle. Plot the unconformity as a second great circle. These values
(from last week’s lab) will be given to you by your instructors.
(b) Mark the point where the two great circles intersect. This represents the orientation of the subcrop line.
Determine the trend and plunge of this line.
(c)* Does it agree with the answer you obtained last week by contouring?
(d) Determine the angle between the vein and the unconformity.
Orientation of vein:_____________________
WULFF NET 15 cm
Introduction
Folds are some of the most striking and spectacular features of the Earth’s crust. In most cases, folds form where layered
rocks have been shortened. Folds are very common, therefore, in orogenic belts – regions where the Earth’s lithosphere
has undergone shortening as a result of plate movements. Orogenic belts often form mountain ranges.
Folds are important economically. Many petroleum traps are located in anticlines. Similarly, gold-bearing quartz veins
in several major goldfields were emplaced in spaces (saddle reefs) that opened between layers during folding.
As with all structures, we will emphasize geometry first, and then venture into kinematics and dynamics once we have a
firm descriptive framework.
Folds are very variable in style. Thus there are many features to describe and measure in typical folded rocks. In
the sections that follow, we will distinguish between variant and invariant features of folds. Invariant features are
independent of fold orientation, whereas variant features depend on the orientation of a fold. Invariant features are
underlined when they are first introduced in the following sections.
All the terms in the following sections are equally applicable to folds at microscopic, outcrop, and map-scale.
E. Folded Surfaces | 65
Geometric description of single folded surfaces
The simplest drawing of a folded surface is in profile view: an ‘end on’ view of the fold. Technically, the profile view is a
view projected onto a plane perpendicular to the fold hinge.
Invariant points
Points of tightest curvature are hinges, located in the hinge region. Points of minimum curvature are inflection points
which are located on fold limbs. If a tangent is drawn at the inflection point on each limb of a fold, the tangents intersect
at the inter-limb angle.
66 | E. Folded Surfaces
Inter-limb angle
Tight 90 – 10°
Isoclinal 10 – 0°
Note that there are several different schemes for defining these categories. The above scheme is that given in the text by
Davis et al. (2011).
Fold shape
Based on their shape, fold hinges can be classified as angular or rounded. (There are more sophisticated classifications
but these will do for our purposes.)
If the limbs dip away from the hinge, then the fold closes upward; we say the fold is an antiform. If the limbs dip towards
the hinge, then the fold closes downward, and the fold is a synform.
Notice that if a fold closes ‘sideways’ so that one limb dips toward the hinge and the other dips away, it’s not possible
to define it as either an antiform or a synform. (We will meet the term ‘recumbent’ which is helpful in describing such
folds, in a later subsection.)
Also in profile, we can identify the highest point on the trace of an antiform, called a crest point. The lowest point on
the trace of a synform is called a trough point. Note that the crest and trough points do not necessarily coincide with
the hinge points, except in perfectly angular, or perfectly upright folds.
A folded surface in sedimentary rocks has a stratigraphic top side and a stratigraphic bottom side. These define the
younging direction. If the younging direction is towards the inside of the fold, then the fold is a syncline. If the younging
direction is away from the inside of the fold, then the fold is an anticline.
In areas of mild deformation like the Rocky Mountain foothills, where the rocks are regionally the right way up, anticlines
are antiforms; the terms can be used more or less interchangeably. Similarly, in such areas synclines are also synforms.
E. Folded Surfaces | 67
However, in areas like the interior of the Cordillera, or the Alps of Europe, there are regions where the rocks are upside
down over large areas. There, it’s possible for antiforms to be synclines and synforms to be anticlines. Therefore it is
important that if you don’t know the younging direction for sure, use only the terms antiform and synform to describe the
fold geometry!
Antiform Synform
In 3-D all the variant and invariant points can be extended into lines.
Hinge line: a line representing the locus of maximum curvature (i.e. joining all the hinge points.) The plane perpendicular
to the fold hinge is called the profile plane. It’s the plane on which we draw a profile view of a fold.
In very regular folds, all these lines are straight and parallel (they have the same trend and plunge). Indeed all planes
measured on such folds are parallel to this unique generating line. We describe such folds as cylindrical, and the
direction of the unique line is the fold axis.
Not all folds are cylindrical, however. In non-cylindrical folds the hinge lines, inflection lines, trough lines and crest lines
may be curved and irregular. The highest point on a crest line is described as a culmination point; layers dip away from
a culmination point in all directions. A culmination point is often an attractive target for petroleum drilling. The lowest
point on a trough line is a depression point. Layers dip towards the depression point in all directions. If a culmination
point is particularly symmetrical, such that the dip increases at about the same rate in all directions, then the fold is a
structural dome. The opposite of a dome, a fold with a symmetrical trough point, is a structural basin. Structural domes
and basins are sometimes described as periclines.
Fold attitude
All the lines in a fold have a trend and plunge; in cylindrical folds these are all the same – the fold axis orientation. In
non-cylindrical folds, the easiest and most regularly measured feature is the hinge line. We can classify folds by hinge-
line plunge as follows:
0-10° Subhorizontal
80-90° Subvertical
68 | E. Folded Surfaces
Trains of folds in profile and 3-D
The above terms apply to single folds. Commonly, multiple folds are observed in the same folded surface, in which case
certain patterns are common.
If we draw a surface that is tangent to all the folds, it is called an enveloping surface. Similarly, the surface that passes
through all the inflection lines is a median surface.
Many folded surfaces show alternating long limbs and short limbs, making the folds asymmetric. This asymmetry allows
folds to be labelled as either S-folds or Z-folds. To determine whether a fold train has S or Z asymmetry look at three
limbs with a long-short-long sequence. If the 3 limbs have the asymmetry of the letter Z then this is a Z-fold; if the limbs
have the asymmetry of the letter S then the fold is an S-fold. Note that this has nothing to do with the fact that the S is
rounded and the Z is angular; it is the rotational symmetry that is important.
A fold that has S-asymmetry when viewed from one end has Z asymmetry from the other. Therefore it is important that
we say which way we are looking when we characterize a fold as S or Z. If the direction of viewing is unspecified, then
the convention is to look in the down-plunge direction.
One common occurrence of S and Z folds is when folds occur at different scales in the same layer. Small folds developed
on the limbs of larger folds, with the same orientation, are called parasitic folds (Fig. 2). Typically, parasitic folds on one
limb have S asymmetry whereas those on the other limb have Z asymmetry. There is often a region on the hinge where
parasitic folds have no clear asymmetry; they are described as M (or W) folds. Sometimes mapping the asymmetry of
outcrop-scale parasitic folds is a good way to locate the hinges of less obvious map-scale major folds.
It is rare to see just a single folded surface in outcrop. Most layered rocks have multiple layers that are folded together,
which enables us to define some additional variant and invariant features.
E. Folded Surfaces | 69
In profile
A line drawn through all the hinge points of a fold is called the axial trace of the fold. (It’s also called the hinge trace,
which is arguably a better term because the trace has little relation to the fold axis, but most structural geologists use
axial trace.)
The other variant and invariant points also correspond to traces on the profile plane: inflection trace, crest trace,
trough trace. (Because all these lines are the traces, on the profile plane, of surfaces in 3-D, the word ‘surface’ is
sometimes added: inflection surface trace, crest surface trace, trough surface trace.)
70 | E. Folded Surfaces
In 3-D
By now you can anticipate that in 3-D each of the lines that we identified on a single surface can be extrapolated into a
surface in 3D.
The most important surface is the axial surface (or hinge surface). This surface is of great kinematic significance
because the pole to the axial surface is often the direction of maximum shortening.
The other surfaces: inflection surface, crest surface, and trough surface are all parallel to the axial surface in a
cylindrical fold.
The facing direction is the direction of younging in the fold axial surface. It is perpendicular to fold hinges but lies in the
axial surface. Notice that folds may have overturned limbs but still face upward.
ANTIFORM SYNFORM
Notice that in upward facing folds the ‘-form’ and the ‘-cline’ are the same. In downward facing folds the ‘-form’ and
‘-cline’ are different.
Fold attitude
Because of its kinematic significance, the strike and dip of the axial surface are important features to measure in an
outcrop of a fold. Folds can be classified by axial surface orientation:
0-10° Recumbent
80-90° Upright
Because of the way the axial surface is defined, the hinge of a fold must be a line that lies in the axial surface. This means
that the plunge of the hinge cannot be steeper than the dip of the axial surface. It also means that the hinge line has a
rake or pitch in the axial surface. There is a special term for folds in which the rake of the hinge in the axial surface is
close to 90°: these are reclined folds.
E. Folded Surfaces | 71
Harmonic and disharmonic folds
All the above features are characteristic of folds where each layer is folded in step with the adjacent layers. These are
called harmonic folds. Sometimes we find layered rocks in which the folds are not so aligned. These are disharmonic
folds. It’s not usually possible to define axial, inflection, trough, or crest surfaces in disharmonic folds, which therefore
provide less information about regional deformation than harmonic folds.
Figure 4. This is a rounded, upright, subhorizontal, open, Figure 5. Moderately inclined, tight, antiformal anticline.
upward facing, synformal syncline. Bramber, Nova Scotia. David Thompson Highway, Alberta.
Figure 6. Steeply inclined folds with axial planar cleavage. Figure 8. Variably inclined synform. Port au Port Peninsula,
Carmanville, Newfoundland. Newfoundland.
72 | E. Folded Surfaces
Figure 9. Buckle folds in sandstone. Rainy Cove, Nova Scotia. Figure 10. Kink band in slate. Tancook Island, Nova Scotia.
E. Folded Surfaces | 73
Some common fold styles
Some types of fold style occur in many circumstances, and can give clues as on the dynamics of folding.. Where layers
of strong rock are interlayered with very weak rock, the strong layers may have nearly constant thickness around fold
hinges, so that the inner and outer arcs are parallel. Such folds are called parallel or concentric folds. Distinctive styles
of parallel folds occur when the strong layers are close together and can slide over each other easily. Under these
conditions, very angular folds may develop. When these have inter-limb angles around 60° they are called chevron folds.
Inter-limb angles around 120° define kink folds. Conversely, when all the layers are weak, for example in rocks near
their melting point, folds may develop in which each folded surface is geometrically similar to the next; these are similar
folds.
Figure 12. Styles of fold. (a) Parallel folds produced by buckling. (b) Similar folds. (c) Chevron folds. (d) Kink folds.
74 | E. Folded Surfaces
Folds in map view
Folded rocks are more complicated in map view than simple planar strata, because map patterns result from a
combination of hills and valleys in the landscape, and antiforms and synforms in the strata.
The shape of folded strata can often be figured out with structure contours, but unlike those for simple planar strata,
structure contours for folded strata are not straight. They show angles or curves. Some examples are shown in the
following diagrams.
If the fold hinges are perfectly horizontal, the structure contours will remain straight and parallel, but the numbers will
show changes of dip:
However, if the fold plunges, the contours themselves will V-shaped, in the case of an angular fold:
E. Folded Surfaces | 75
Figure 14. Structure contour pattern for a plunging angular synform.
If the fold is rounded, the structure contours will be curved, showing U-shapes:
If the fold is overturned, the contours will again be V or U-shaped but contours for both limbs will occur on the same
side of the fold hinge:
76 | E. Folded Surfaces
Figure 16. Structure contour pattern for an overturned plunging angular synform.
Fold overprinting
Areas affected by multiple episodes of folding may display refolded folds in a bewildering variety of orientations,
producing a variety of fold interference patterns.
To make sense of these we use a classification (devised, like many other fundamental classifications of folds, by J.
Ramsay, 1967). This classification relates to two generations of folds only – if we have 3 or more generations things get
more complicated.
• an axial surface
• a fold hinge that lies in that axial surface
We examine the effect of the second generation of folds on those two structures.
E. Folded Surfaces | 77
If later folding does not bend either the axial surfaces or the hinges of early folds,
then the early folds are effectively just tightened during the second phase of
deformation. The fold pattern is described as ‘type 0’, and generally it will not be
apparent from geometry that there have been two phases of deformation.
If later shortening is roughly parallel to the hinges of the early folds, and the
extension direction also lies in the early fold axial surfaces, then later folding
bends the hinges of the early folds but does not significantly bend the axial
surfaces. This typically produces culminations and depressions on the early fold
hinges, and leads to oval outcrop patterns of layer traces on outcrop surfaces.
This is called a type 1 fold interference pattern, characterized by domes and
basins.
78 | E. Folded Surfaces
If on the other hand, the extension direction in the second deformation is at a
high angle to the early axial surfaces, then those axial surfaces may be folded too.
Under these circumstances outcrop patterns are characterized by complex
shapes that resemble mushrooms and bananas. This is called a type 2 interference
pattern.
There is a third case, which occurs when the shortening direction is at a high
angle to the early fold hinges and the extension direction is at a high angle to the
early axial surfaces. Under these conditions the early hinges may remain more or
less straight but the early axial surfaces are folded. The trace of layering typically
follows a multiple zigzag shape described as a type 3 interference pattern.
E. Folded Surfaces | 79
How to analyse an overprinted fold
pattern
References
Davis, G.H., Reynolds, S,J. and Kluth, C.F. (2011) Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions, 3rd Edition, Wiley, New York,
864 p.
Ramsay, J.G. (1967) Folding and Fracturing of Rocks: San Francisco, McGraw Hill, 568 p.
Van der Pluijm, B.A. and Marshak, S. (2004) Earth Structure: An Introduction to Structural Geology and Tectonics,
Norton, New York, 656 p.
80 | E. Folded Surfaces
• Lab 4. Introduction to Folds
Both contouring and stereographic projection are powerful techniques for the analysis of folds. When contouring folded
surfaces, you may have to try out more than one possible solution. Map patterns in folded rocks may show V-shapes that
represent true fold hinges, and other V-shapes that represent the effect of valleys and ridges intersecting with planar
surfaces. Try to identify any V-shapes that cannot be attributed to topography; these are likely to be outcrops of fold
hinges. Fold hinge outcrops lie on fold axial traces. These are lines on the map that divide the map into different fold
limbs. Try to work on one limb at a time when contouring. Remember, there may be more than one possible solution,
but the simplest solution, geologically, is usually the best.
If a fold is cylindrical, then all the planes in the folded surface contain the same line. In principle, if we find the
intersection of any two planes, we can define the fold axis. The plane perpendicular to the fold axis is the profile plane.
We can also use the stereographic projection to find the inter-limb angle, if we have measurements of the orientation
of the folded surface on the limbs at the inflection points.
Assignment
Do the questions in any order, so as to use the various materials when they are available. (Samples for question 1 may
not be available outside the lab hours.)
1.* Look at the samples of folded rocks displayed in the lab. Choose one sample in each group, and make a labelled
diagram of the fold in profile view. Make your diagram large (fill a whole page). Your diagram should be a scientific
illustration, not a work of art! Use simple clear lines to show boundaries of layers within the sample. If there are too
many layers to show precisely, use a dashed ornament to show the form for the layer traces. Label as many invariant
features as you can.
2.* Why would you not label variant features of these folds?
3. Construct a topographic profile and cross-section through Map 1. Proceed as follows. Mark with colours the various
surfaces that separate the units. Look for places where V-shapes in the traces cannot be explained by valleys and
ridges in the topography, and lightly circle possible locations for fold hinge points. Draw structure contours for
each surface, on each fold limb, using lead pencil. Use coloured numbers on the contours, to show which contour
corresponds to which surface. Use these to construct the geology on the cross-section.
4. Describe the folds as completely as you can using the terms in the previous sections of this manual. (Note that the
units are shown in their correct stratigraphic order in the legend.)
c) *Calculate the plunge and trend of the easternmost fold in the area. Keep a note of your answer as you will need
it in lab 5.
f) On the map, and on cross-section C-D, show the potential maximum size of an oil reservoir that might have been
missed by the existing wells. (Note that in porous units like the Great Cavern Limestone, oil usually rises to the
highest point in the reservoir rock; the base of an oil reservoir is typically a horizontal oil-water contact.) Draw
the maximum extent of the potential reservoir on the map and the cross section. Suggest a spot for well 27 on
the map and cross section which would maximize the chance for an oil discovery.
g) *Make an estimate of the maximum potential volume of the reservoir, if the Great Cavern Limestone has 10%
porosity. To do this, estimate the maximum possible area of the reservoir in square metres. Also calculate its
maximum vertical thickness. Then, by approximating the shape of the reservoir as a cone, use the equation for
the volume of a cone (one third base area times height) to figure out the approximate volume of the reservoir,
and from this, a rough estimate of the maximum volume of petroleum it might contain.
(For a more realistic estimate of the potential resource it would be necessary to take into account the potential
presence of other fluids in the reservoir, the effects of pressure, and the proportion of the fluids that could be
economically extracted.)
h) *Research: find out the conversion factor between cubic metres and barrels, and express your answer in barrels!
The techniques you used in the last lab work well for folds
that are perfectly cylindrical, and where the orientations
of the folded surfaces are known with great precision.
However, in many cases, folded surfaces are not perfectly
cylindrical, and small variations in dip, and measurement
errors, mean that the geometry is not perfect. Under
these circumstances, to determine the orientation of a
mean fold axis, it is desirable to measure a large number
of orientations, and to use a statistical approach.
Pi diagram
Maps of areas with folded rocks can be challenging because of the number of surfaces involved, and because of rapid
changes of strike and dip. Often, even though layers may show complex folding, axial surfaces may be approximately
planar. Under these circumstances it makes sense to separate the limbs of the fold by drawing axial traces, and even
to draw contours on the fold axial surfaces. When doing this, it’s important to remember that a single fold will have
multiple hinges (one for each folded surface), but that these hinges lie in a single fold axial surface.
Assignment
1.* The area you contoured last week (Great Cavern petroleum prospect) shows strike and dip symbols representing
measurements of bedding orientation.
Plot poles to bedding for all the strike and dip measurements on an equal area projection, to make a pi-diagram.
Find and draw the best-fit great circle through the poles; this represents the profile plane. Mark the best
estimate of the fold axis (pole to the profile plane) and determine its trend and plunge. Is it similar to the value
you obtained by contouring last week, and to the values obtained by your other team members?
a) The map has structure contours, shown in red, drawn on one surface. Which one surface? (Note: each formation
on the map has a top and a bottom surface, so just a formation name is not a complete answer; your answer
should be in the form ‘the boundary between Formation x and Formation y’.)
b) Use the spacing of the structure contours to determine the strike and dip, at its steepest point, on each limb of
the most conspicuous fold. Note that the contours are in feet, and the scale of the map is 1:62500 (about 1 inch
to 1 mile). Make sure that in your dip calculation you use the same units vertically and horizontally. Use the points
where the contours cross the fold hinge to determine the average trend and plunge of the fold hinge.
c) Plot both limbs of the fold from part ‘b’ on a stereographic projection. Using the intersection and the angle
between the planes, estimate the plunge and trend of the fold axis, and the interlimb angle of the fold.
d) Based on these observations, describe the orientation (plunge, tightness, overall orientation) of the fold in words
(e.g. ‘tight, steeply plunging synformal anticline’)
e) If the fold is cylindrical, the fold axis orientation determined stereographically should coincide with the hinge
orientation determined by contours. How close are they (in degrees)?
To find out more, take a look at: Flint 1965 Geology and mineral resources of southern Somerset County, Pennsylvania
3. Map 1 contains an angular fold in a more general orientation than the perfectly horizontal folds you dealt with
last week. In addition there are some unfolded rocks and an intrusion. An unconformity separates the more highly
deformed folded rocks from the gently dipping younger rocks. To help you solve the map, note that in the west of
the map, the bedding traces are somewhat parallel to the topographic contours. These regions correspond to a gentle
fold limb. Elsewhere, the geological boundaries cut across the contours at a steeper angle; this is a steep fold limb.
Fold hinges can also be identified on the map from sharp swings in the trace of bedding that are not obviously related
to valleys and ridges. Before you begin, try to use these hinges to sketch where there might be fold axial traces; these
a) Identify the various surfaces on the map. First, mark the unconformity surface in green or yellow. Then mark the
boundary between marble and amphibolite in blue or violet. Mark the boundary between amphibolite and schist
in red or orange. (Note: the colour scheme is provided for convenience. If you choose different colours, you must
use them consistently throughout this exercise.)
c) Draw structure contours on the red surface. You will find that there are two parts to this surface: a steep limb
and a gentle limb. These have separate sets of contours. The two sets of red contours intersect in a fold hinge.
Mark this on the map and trace over it with red.
d) Repeat for the blue surface and mark the blue hinge.
e) The red hinge and the blue hinge are both lines that lie in the axial surface of the fold. Join points of equivalent
elevation on the red hinge and blue hinge with lines: these are structure contours on the axial surface. Number
them in purple or violet.
f) Use the axial trace contours to predict the outcrop trace of the axial surface, and draw this trace on the map. The
axial trace should separate the steep limb from the gentle limb of the fold.
h) Plot both fold limbs, the axial surface, and the unconformity as great circles on an equal area projection. Mark
the point corresponding to the orientation of the fold axis.
j) List the events in the geological history of the area for which you have evidence, starting with the oldest. In the
case of the three folded units, where there is no direct evidence of age, you should assume that the fold is upward
facing (i.e. synforms are also synclines; antiforms are also anticlines).
Schmidt Net 15 cm
Sometimes layers undergo extension in all directions simultaneously, producing a more three-dimensional boudinage
structure described as chocolate tablet structure. It is also possible to find examples of layers that have undergone both
folding and boudinage during progressive deformation.
F. Boudinage | 87
G. Kinematic Analysis and Strain
Everything we have done so far in this course has been about describing the ‘here and now’ of structural geology: where
are structures and how are they oriented in the Earth’s crust at the present day.
To understand the origin of structures we need to know how things changed during the formation of those structures –
how things moved. When we study how things moved over geologic time, we are studying kinematics.
The first two are rigid body deformations. The last two
together constitute non-rigid deformation or strain.
Translation
Rotation, or change in orientation, is typically measured in degrees, about a particular axis of rotation. (A rotation is
therefore also a vector quantity, because it has a magnitude and a direction.)
A common kinematic problem involving rotation is to remove the effects of folding from some structure. For example,
a sedimentologist may measure the orientation of a paleocurrent structure in folded strata, and wants to know the
original direction of current flow.
This type of problem is most easily solved on the stereographic projection. As beds are ‘unfolded’, the paleocurrent
directions they contain rotate along small circles on the stereonet. The small circles are centred on the fold axis.
Volume change is very difficult to measure in real rocks. However, under some circumstances it can be quantified. Most
sedimentary rocks undergo some compaction as they are buried, because pore water is expelled. Compaction results
in a negative dilation. Another common phenomenon involving negative dilation is pressure solution in which some
minerals in a rock are dissolved in response to stress.
Distortion
Distortion is by far the most complicated type of deformation to measure. When rocks are distorted they typically get
longer in some directions and shorter in others. Also, angles change in distortion. Because of this, strain cannot be
represented by a scalar or a vector. It is a more complicated quantity that is called a tensor.
Strain
In popular speech the word “strain” conjours up an impression of applying force; “straining” at something implies a
dynamic process. The word “strain” has a different meaning in science and engineering – it describes something purely
kinematic – a change in shape or volume, however caused. There are examples of strain in which no force is involved: A
reflection in a distorting mirror, and the distorted image of a basketball on a widescreen TV are both images that have
undergone strain, but they are made of light rays; no force is causing the distortion.
(The corresponding dynamic term is “stress”, which we will study in a later section. Take care never to confuse stress
with strain!)
All the structures we see in the Earth’s crust are manifestations of strain. Strain is such a fundamental concept in
structural geology that in more advanced courses, the mathematics of strain is often treated first. In this course we take
a more practical approach and focus on describing structures first. However, by now, it should be clear that changes in
the shape of rocks can be recognized in all the structures you have studied so far.
Strain can vary from place to place in rocks. We distinguish a special case:
Homogenous strain: strain that is the same everywhere within a body of rock. In homogeneous strain, straight lines
remain straight, parallel lines remain parallel, circles are deformed into ellipses.
Strain that is not homogeneous is heterogenous. In heterogenous strain, straight lines can be bent, and lines that were
initially parallel are rotated by different amounts, becoming non-parallel.
Even in a homogeneous strain, differently oriented lines experience different amounts of strain. In the diagram, each
trilobite is affected differently by deformation, even though the overall strain is homogeneous.
Strain axes
Strain axes have some other special properties. They are always at right angles to each other, and they also represent
lines of zero shear strain. This means that they were perpendicular before deformation started too. (However, during
deformation they may have diverged from this perpendicular relationship and then come back to it!). The strain axes are
the only lines that have this property.
The strain ratio is a convenient measure of the amount of distortion in 2-D. The strain ratio is the ratio between the
long axis and the short axis of the strain ellipse:
Strain ellipsoid
The strain ellipsoid is a convenient way to represent a state of homogenous strain, or the strain at a point, in three
dimensions. The strain ellipsoid is the shape of a deformed sphere that originally had unit radius.
The radius of the strain ellipsoid in any direction is equal to the stretch s in that direction. In 3-D, the strain ellipsoid is
thus a good way to represent the variation of longitudinal strain with direction.
A strain ellipsoid has three lines X,Y and Z that are special. They represent the maximum and minimum stretches, called
sX and sZ respectively, and a third, intermediate axis of intermediate stretch sY, that is mutually perpendicular to the
other two. These lines are strain axes.
They have some other special properties. They are at right angles to each other, and they also represent poles to
planes of zero shear strain. This means that they were perpendicular before deformation started too. (However, during
deformation they may have diverged from this perpendicular relationship and then come back to it!). The strain axes are
the only lines that have this property.
In 3D the shape of the strain ellipsoid can’t be defined by a single strain ratio. Instead we recognize two strain ratios a=
sX/sY and b= sY/sZ. If a is large and b is small then the strain ellipsoid looks like a football or a cigar, and is described as
prolate. Rocks with prolate strains often display strong linear fabrics (lineations). In contrast if a is small and b is large
then the strain ellipsoid looks like a cushion or a pancake, and is described as oblate. Rocks with oblate strains often
display strong planar fabrics (foliations).
The range of possible strain ellipsoid shapes can be illustrated on a graph of a against b known as a Flinn plot.
All the above measures have concerned just strain. However, if we look at the whole deformation picture, we may see
situations where rotation has gone on at the same time as strain. Under these circumstances it’s helpful to look at the
behaviour of the strain axes.
If the strain axes have the same orientation as they did before deformation started, then the deformation is non-
rotational (sometimes irrotational). (Note that even in a non-rotational strain other lines will have been rotated, and
will show shear strain, but it is the strain axes that are important for the terminology here.)
If the strain axes have rotated during deformation, then the deformation is described as rotational.
Once we start looking at rotation, it’s difficult to avoid discussing strain history too. When we look at a deformed rock
what we see is the product of a whole history of deformation. That end product is called the finite deformation and the
strain part of the deformation is the finite strain.
In more detailed analyses of strain, we may be interested in all the tiny increments of strain that have contributed to
the final picture. Each one is called an incremental strain.
The infinitesimal strain is the end product of this type of thinking. The strain history is thought of as being made up
of an infinite number of infinitesimal strain increments. (The general idea should be familiar if you have taken a class
in calculus.) This idea of infinitesimal strain becomes important if we look at strain rates. Strain rates are typically
measured in units of per second, or s-1 sometimes expressed as strains per second. In geologically reasonable situations,
the amount of strain that occurs in a second is almost infinitesimal. Typical ductile strain rates in the Earth’s crust are
thought to be between 10-12 and 10-15 s-1.
If the strain increments are all non-rotational, then the strain axes maintain their same direction relative to the material
of the rock. The deformation is called coaxial. This type of deformation is also called pure strain.
Any other type of strain history is a noncoaxial. There are many types of noncoaxial strain history, but one particular
type is important in the study of shear zones. It is simple shear. In simple shear, all the particles of the rock move in
the same direction, but the strain axes are progressively rotated. Sometimes, by looking in detail at the fabric of shear
zones, we can distinguish the sense of rotation and figure out which way the rocks were moving.
Any rock that has properties that vary with direction is said to have fabric. Like most structures, fabrics can
be primary or secondary. Examples of primary fabric are bedding in sedimentary rocks and flow banding in igneous
rocks. Secondary fabrics typically indicate that strain has occurred. Fabrics are common in folded rocks, and if fabrics
develop at the same time as folding they often have a very specific relationship to folds.
Fabrics may be planar or linear. Planar fabrics are also called foliations. (Note that some textbooks restrict the term
foliation to particular types of planar fabric, with coarse mineral grains as in a schist; we will use it in a more
general sense to designate any planar fabric.) Rocks with a strong secondary planar fabric are sometimes called S-
tectonites (the S is for schistosity). Linear fabrics are called lineations. Rocks with a strong secondary lineation are
sometimes called L-tectonites.
It is common to find a lineation that lies parallel to (or in the plane of) a planar fabric. Rocks with a strong tectonic
lineation that lies in the plane of a tectonic foliation are sometimes called LS-tectonites.
Fabric Elements
Fundamental to the description of fabrics is the concept of a fabric element. Fabric elements (Fig. 1, 2) are the things that
are aligned to give a rock a fabric. Fabric elements include things like layers and lenses of different composition, grains
of minerals that are tabular (like mica) or acicular (like hornblende or sillimanite). Folds can also be fabric elements, if
there are enough of them.
This leads to a second important concept: the idea of a penetrative fabric. A fabric is penetrative if it is present
everywhere in the rock. For example, some slates can be split almost anywhere: there’s effectively an infinite number of
cleavage planes. In others, the cleavage planes are visibly spaced and are termed non-penetrative.
Penetrative fabrics
H. Fabrics | 99
Non-penetrative fabrics
• The fabric planes or lines are spaced apart within the rock, or
• It is possible to see spaces between the fabric planes or lines where no fabric is present, or
• The fabric planes or lines can be counted.
Note that penetrative character is a scale-dependent concept; a fabric that is penetrative at map and outcrop scale may
prove to be non-penetrative in thin section.
Fabric elements
100 | H. Fabrics
Domains:
A domain is a region within a rock that has a distinctive composition or texture. Flattened clasts in a sedimentary
rock can produce a foliation if they are all aligned to a plane. Stretched clasts in a sedimentary rock can produce
a lineation if they are all aligned parallel to a line.
Layers:
Layers are really just domains that are very extensive and parallel-sided.
Rods:
Rods are really just domains that are very elongated and continuous.
Closely spaced fractures can produce a type of cleavage called fracture cleavage.
Fold hinges:
Numerous closely spaced fold hinges may produce a lineation in highly deformed rocks. This structure is called
a crenulation lineation.
Numerous closely spaced fold axial surfaces define a fabric called called crenulation cleavage, because the axial
surfaces may be planes of weakness along which a rock tends to split.
Intersecting foliations:
Whenever two intersecting foliations are present, there is always an intersection lineation defined by their
intersection. In the field, although it’s possible to calculate the intersection lineation from strike-and-dip
measurements of the two foliations, it’s usually much more accurate to measure the lineation directly.
Primary fabrics:
H. Fabrics | 101
Slaty cleavage:
Schistosity:
Figure 3. Axial planar slaty cleavage parallel to hammer
handle, Carmanville NL.
Schistosity is a coarser grained version of slaty cleavage, and is
the term used for a more or less penetrative foliation defined by mineral grains coarser than about 1 mm. Many
geologists actually recognize an intermediate feature phyllitic foliation, when the fabric-defining minerals are just
visible. However, the boundaries between these categories have never been formally defined.
Schistosity involves the same types of process as slaty cleavage, but is typical of higher metamorphic grades and always
involves significant new mineral growth.
Gneissic banding:
Flattening fabric:
When a foliation is defined by domains that represent identifiable deformed objects in a rock, such as flattened pebbles
in a deformed conglomerate, the fabric can be called a flattening fabric. (Most foliations are probably produced by
flattening, but this term is used when the origin is obvious.)
102 | H. Fabrics
Pressure-solution cleavage:
Crenulation cleavage:
Crenulation cleavage is defined by closely spaced fold Figure 4. Pressure-solution cleavage, Bay of Islands NL.
Sometimes crenulation cleavage is combined with pressure solution to produce differentiated crenulation cleavage.
Mylonitic foliation:
Extreme ductile shearing in shear zones tends to reduce the grain size of mineral grains, while stretching the original
grains out into domains of extreme dimensions, and also producing strong crystallographic preferred orientation. This
type of foliation is called mylonitic foliation. It’s almost always accompanied by a lineation, producing an LS-fabric.
H. Fabrics | 103
Relationships of foliations to folds
104 | H. Fabrics
The axial planar relationship is very useful when
disentangling superimposed folds. It’s conventional to
number fold generations, starting with the earliest, as F1,
F2, F3 etc. The corresponding axial planar foliations are
called S1, S2 etc., where S1 is axial planar to F1, but is
folded by F2. Sometimes the numbering scheme is even
extended to bedding, which is labelled S0.
Primary lineations: Primary lineations are less common than primary foliations. Typically, primary lineations in
sedimentary and igneous rocks both reflect flow direction.
Mineral lineations: Mineral lineations are the linear equivalent of slaty cleavage and schistosity. Strain studies suggest
that mineral lineations typically form parallel to the direction of maximum extension, the S1, or X axis of the strain
ellipsoid. Like their planar counterparts. they probably form by a combination of grain rotation, solution, and grain
growth during deformation.
H. Fabrics | 105
Crenulation lineation: Crenulation cleavage is defined by
closely spaced fold hinges. It’s almost always a second or
later generation of fabric: an initial deformation produces
a foliation and later deformation folds that foliation to
produce a crenulation lineation. Crenulation lineation is
almost always visible when crenulation cleavage is
present.
106 | H. Fabrics
Figure 7. Different types of lineation and their fabric elements. The idealized ellipsoidal shapes in a
– c could be individual mineral grains, clumps of metamorphic minerals, deformed pebbles, etc. (a)
Simple lineation defined by elongate mineral grains or boundaries. (b) Combined lineation and
foliation defined by bodies that are both elongated and tabular. (c) Bodies that are both linear and
tabular are arranged so that only a lineation is defined. (d) Crenulation lineation and foliation
defined by the hinges and axial surfaces of small folds or crenulations. (e) Intersection lineation
defined by two differently-oriented foliations. Based on Hobbs, B.E., Means, W.D., and Williams, P.F.
1976. An Outline of Structural Geology. Wiley.
In folds with axial planar foliations, an intersection lineation is formed where the cleavage planes cut through the folded
surfaces. If the folds are reasonably cylindrical, this intersection lineation is parallel to the fold axis. Measuring the
intersection lineation is therefore a valuable way of finding fold axis orientations in areas where fold hinges are not well
exposed.
Sometimes a second lineation can be seen in folded rocks with axial planar slaty cleavage. This lineation takes the form
of faint streaks on the cleavage surfaces at a high angle to the fold hinges. It’s sometimes called a down-dip lineation
H. Fabrics | 107
from its orientation in areas of gently plunging folds. It probably originates as a stretching lineation, and represents the
long axis of the strain ellipsoid (X).
In higher grade rocks, sometimes stretching lineations (or mineral lineations thought to be formed by stretching) are
found parallel to fold hinges. This is usually an indication that extreme shearing has occurred, with the generation of
sheath folds. These will be considered in more detail when we deal with mylonites later in the course.
In areas with multiple generations of fabrics and folds, lineations are typically numbered L1, L2 etc., to correspond with
fold and foliation generations.
108 | H. Fabrics
• Lab 6. Fabrics and Folds
Introduction
A fabric is essentially any structure that gives a rock different properties in one direction from another. In other words,
some things in the rock have a preferred orientation. The ‘somethings’ in this case are the fabric elements. Although a
fabric may be obvious, a close look may be necessary to determine what are the fabric elements.
Because fabrics and folds are both produced by strain, they commonly operate together. In the part of this lab that is
map-based you are asked to unravel the structure of an area with both folds and fabrics.
Before you begin, make sure you are familiar with the earlier sections dealing with fold overprinting and with fabrics.
Note that the samples may only be available in the lab time.
Figure 1. Relationship of fold hinge to axial surface. Left: block diagram. Right: stereographic projection.
Assignment.
1. *To illustrate the concept of fabric elements, you are provided with some everyday objects with simple fabric. For each
fabric, determine:
3. You are provided a map of a group of glacially smoothed, low-lying islands showing metamorphic rock outcrops
(Map 1). The structures are typically of the deeply eroded cores of many orogens. There are two generations of folds,
with associated fabrics and asymmetric parasitic folds. A penetrative schistosity is present everywhere, together
with a locally developed crenulation cleavage and crenulation lineation. In a few places, it is possible to see an
intersection lineation between bedding and schistosity, though these two foliations are almost parallel in many
outcrops, indicating that deformation has been intense.
a. Using an equal area projection, plot the orientations of the schistosity as poles.
b. Look at the folds on each island in turn. Notice that some of the folds deform the bedding but not the
schistosity; these folds have axial planar schistosity, and therefore probably formed at around the same time as
the schistosity. These folds are the first generation that can be identified in the area. Label them F1, in a
distinctive colour (e.g. red). Other folds clearly formed after the schistosity because they fold the schistosity.
Label these folds F2 in a contrasting colour (e.g. blue).
c. Label each F2 fold as S or Z based on its asymmetry. Use the same colour that you used to identify F2 folds.
d. Using your results from b and c, draw and label the principal fold axial trace for an F2 map-scale fold. Remember,
a fold axial trace will separate S and Z senses of asymmetry. Label it using the F2 colour.
e. From your equal area projection, estimate the orientation of the F2 fold axis. Both the fold axis and the axial
trace are lines that lie in the axial surface. Use these two lines to draw the axial surface as a great circle on
your projection and determine its orientation. Add the crenulation cleavage and crenulation lineation to your
projection. What is their relationship to the folds?
f. For each F1 fold, label it as S or Z based on its asymmetry, using the F1 colour. Draw the F1 axial traces on the
map. (Remember, the F1 folds will probably have been refolded by F2, so you should not expect their traces to be
straight!) Assuming the chlorite schist is the youngest unit, characterize the main F1 folds as either anticlines or
synclines.
g. Add labels S0, S1, S2, L1, etc. to the legend where indicated by ‘…..’
h. Complete the map as far as possible in the unexposed areas between the islands to show the overall structure
(to help you visualize the structure, you may wish to sketch a cross-section AB, but this is not required).
Lab 6 Map 1
Introduction
Dynamics is the part of structural geology that involves energy, force, stress, and strength.
It’s very important to distinguish dynamic concepts from kinematic ones. Many mistakes have been made in structural
geology by people who have tried to do dynamic analysis without first understanding how things have moved
(kinematics). Although words like stress and strain have very similar meanings in everyday life, their scientific meanings
are very different. Stress is a dynamic term whereas strain is purely kinematic.
Even in everyday life, it’s difficult to measure a force or stress directly. For example, when you stand on a bathroom scale,
you are deforming a spring (that’s strain!). It is only because the spring has very precisely known dynamic properties
(stress and strain are proportional for the spring) that we can use that strain to infer something about your weight.
In geology, our knowledge of the stress-strain relationship for rocks (especially when buried deep in the crust and
deformed over millions of years) is quite patchy. Be careful, when using dynamic terms, that you really know what are
you are talking about!
Units of force
Force is measure in Newtons where 1 N is the force necessary to accelerate a mass of 1 kg by 1 m/s2.
Units of stress
In structural geology we are almost always interested in what a force does to some part of the Earth’s crust, so we need
a measure of force concentration or force per unit area. This is stress.
Note: some textbooks define two different quantities: traction is the force per unit area on a single plane, a vector
quantity; stress is the total of forces acting on all possible planes that pass through a point in the Earth’s crust, a tensor
quantity. At this level we refer to both concepts as ‘stress’; the sense is almost always clear from the context.
1 Pascal isn’t enough to do detectable damage to any kind of rock. More useful units are:
1000 Pa = 1 kPa
106 Pa = 1 MPa
1 GPa is roughly the pressure at the base of the crust, about 30 km down.
There are other units out there. You may encounter the atmosphere (atm), and the pound per square inch (psi)
1 psi = 690 Pa
All these units can be used to describe pressure. Pressure is the state of stress in a stationary fluid, like water. In
fact, pressure is also known as hydrostatic stress. Hydrostatic stress is the type of stress experienced by a submerged
submarine. Each 1 m2 of the skin of the submarine experiences the same force, acting perpendicular to that surface.
In solids, the situation is more complex. Each surface of a mineral grain within the Earth experiences a different force
concentration depending on its orientation. Also, some surfaces experience forces that are not perpendicular to the
surface.
In fact, we can resolve the force per unit area (a vector) on a surface into two components.
Normal stress, also known as normal traction σn is the part of that stress that acts perpendicular to the surface. Shear
stress also known as shear traction σs is the part that acts parallel to the surface.
Because most normal stresses within the Earth act inward, geologists represent compressive normal stress as positive,
and use negative numbers for tensile stresses. When we start talking about stress and strain, this can cause confusion,
because positive stress (inwards) tends to cause negative extension (ie shortening) and vice versa. (Engineers often use the
opposite convention, which is mathematically more logical, but requires pressure to be a negative quantity, which is less
intuitive for most people).
For any given orientation (strike and dip) of a surface passing through a given point in the crust, there is a different value
of normal and shear stress. At first sight this is a bewildering mess of forces, all acting in different directions at the same
point, but there are some relationships between the various forces that simplify things.
First, if we represent all the stresses acting on all the surfaces as vectors, drawn as arrows, the tails of those arrows
make an ellipse (in 2-D) or an ellipsoid (in 3-D). The ellipsoid is called the stress ellipsoid.
Second, it’s possible to prove that there are always three mutually perpendicular planes that experience no shear
stress. These are principal planes of stress. The normal stresses they experience are the maximum, minimum, and an
intermediate value of normal stress. We call them principal stresses and label them, in order:
σ1 > σ2 > σ3
The directions of the principal stresses are called the stress axes.
You may have noticed that there are close analogies between stress and strain. Be careful not to confuse them! Stress is
dynamic; strain is kinematic!
Figure 2. The state of stress at a point within the Earth can be represented in many different ways.
(a) Stress axes and principal stresses. (b) Principal planes of stress; these planes experience zero
shear stress. (c) Stress ellipsoid. (d) Stress axes and principal planes of stress on a stereographic
projection.
Hydrostatic stress is the special case where σ1 = σ2 = σ3 and is equivalent to ‘pressure‘ in a fluid. Where the pressure is
due to overlying rock, not fluid, the term lithostatic stress is sometimes used.
In much of the Earth’s crust, the state of stress is non-hydrostatic. However, pressure is still a useful concept. What
we mean by pressure under those circumstances is mean stress. The mean stress is the average of the three principal
stresses.
The mean stress is the part of the stress that acts to change volume. It’s the most important type of stress for
metamorphic petrologists, because high mean stress (high pressure) tends to produce dense minerals like garnet and
glaucophane.
What about the rest of the stress? If we subtract the mean stress from each of the principal stresses, we get a “left over”
stress system called the deviatoric stress defined by principal values.
σ1 = σm , σ2 = σm , σ3 = σm
The deviatoric stress is the part of the stress that acts to change shape, and is the part of greatest interest to structural
geologists.
A related concept is the differential stress. This is just the difference between the largest and the smallest principal
stress: σd = σ1 – σ3.
Effective stress
A final concept to be aware of in dynamic analysis is that of effective stress. In porous rock, the pore spaces are typically
filled with fluid, often water, but sometimes oil or natural gas. If that fluid is itself under pressure, it partially supports
the mineral grains, and reduces the stresses between the solid parts of the rock, making them behave as if they were
located at a shallower depth. The effective stress is the true stress minus the fluid pressure. It is the part of the stress
that acts within the solid components of a porous rock.
Stress regimes
The Earth’s surface is approximately a plane of zero shear stress (give or take a few ocean currents and wind storms).
For this reason, near the Earth’s surface, one of the principal stresses is approximately vertical, and the other two are
approximately horizontal.
In a general way, these three regimes correspond respectively to typical states of stress near the three types of plate
boundary: spreading centres, transform faults, and subduction zones.
Stress-strain relationships
Experimental rigs are used to study the types of stress that are necessary to produce different kinds of strain in rocks.
A great deal has been learned from such experiments. However, it’s important to realize one major limitation: time.
Geological strain rates are of the order of 10-12 – 10-15 strains per second. In the lab, if we don’t want to run our
experiments for hundreds of years, it’s not feasible to achieve strain rates much below 10-8 strains per second. To get
geologically meaningful results we have to extrapolate experiments to much slower strain rates.
Elastic
When rocks are subjected to small strains at low confining pressure (or mean stress) we find that the stress is
proportional to the strain, and the strain is recoverable (i.e. it goes away when the stress is removed).
This type of stress-strain relationship is called elastic. The elastic behaviour or rocks allows them to store strain energy
and to transmit seismic waves.
Brittle
As stress and strain are increased, eventually most rocks undergo a catastrophic loss of strength, with the release of
stored strain energy. In an experiment this is called brittle fracture or brittle failure. In an experimental rig the result
is a loud bang and the sample disintegrates. In the Earth’s crust the result is an earthquake.
If the confining pressure is higher still, or the temperature is raised, a different type of behaviour occurs. After an
initial phase of elastic deformation, the sample starts to deform in a ductile manner: it flows without breaking. This
deformation is also non-recoverable, but it occurs without complete loss of strength. The sample shortens in the σ1
direction, and thickens parallel to σ3.
In ideal plastic behaviour, a sample shows no deformation at all until a certain stress (yield stress) is reached. Thereafter,
it deforms freely so that however much shortening is imposed by the rig, it’s impossible to get the stress to go any
higher.
Real rocks are a bit more complicated than the ideal. They typically show some elastic deformation below the yield
stress, and with continuing plastic deformation the stress may rise a little or fall a little.
Viscous
At temperatures close to their melting point, some rocks show a much simpler type of flow behaviour without a yield
stress. In viscous behaviour, any small amount of stress will cause strain to start. The strain rate is proportional
to the stress. Viscous behaviour is sometimes also called Newtonian. Water, air, magmas, and rock salt may show
approximately Newtonian behaviour.
Competence
What controls how a given rock will respond to stress? Several variables control the specific response in a given
situation. Confining stress (or mean stress, roughly equivalent to the concept of ‘pressure’) is one of these variables;
mean stress increases with depth within the Earth. Temperature exerts a tremendous influence on rock strength, and
also typically increases with depth according to the geothermal gradient. The strain rate, which is the rate at which the
rocks are being deformed, is a third variable. Finally, the rock composition exerts considerable influence as well.
For each of the above idealized types of behaviour, there is a parameter that measures a rock’s strength, or resistance to
stress. For elastic deformation it is called Young’s modulus; for brittle behaviour it is the differential stress at failure; for
plastic deformation it’s the yield stress; and for viscous behaviour it’s the viscosity.
Real rocks show complicated mixtures of these behaviour types, making these quantities very hard to measure.
Nonetheless, in the field we can often recognize rock types that have undergone more strain, and those that have
undergone less, side by side in the same outcrop (where they have presumably had very similar stress histories). Under
these circumstances it’s useful to have a general term for resistance for stress. That term is competence. For example,
if we observe that layers of slate have undergone a lot more strain than interbedded quartzite layers, we might deduce
that the quartzite was more competent.
Introduction
The orientation of a fracture, like any planar surface, can be defined by its strike and dip. At map scale the location and
orientation can be represented by structure contours. The rocks immediately above a fracture constitute the hanging
wall and those immediately below, the footwall (Figure 2). Such being the case, by definition the plane dips in the
J. Fractures | 117
direction towards the hanging wall. Clearly, these terms have no meaning if the fracture is vertical, in which case the
walls are better identified as ‘north wall’ or ‘southeast wall’, etc. depending on the strike.
If there is space between the two walls of a fracture its width is known as the fracture aperture. Some fractures show
constant aperture over large distances, but in most there is some variation. Fractures do not extend forever through the
Earth’s crust. The point at which the trace of a fracture ends is known as a fracture tip. In three dimensions, the tip of a
fracture is a linear feature, known as a tip line.
Joints are very common in many outcrops, but their orientations are typically not random. It is common to observe
many joints in approximately the same orientation. These are known as a joint set.
A combination of joint sets, cross-cutting each other in a regular way, is known as a joint system.
118 | J. Fractures
Features of joint surfaces
Plume structure can be simulated in laboratory experiments. It records the process of fracture propagation, and the
dynamics of the fracture tip.
Fracture propagation is the process whereby a fracture grows within a rock, and involves the outward migration of the
fracture tip. Fracture propagation may be very fast: speeds up to those typical of seismic waves (a few kilometres per
second) are possible.
Because the fracture tip at any moment is the boundary between unfractured rock and rock that has been weakened by
fracturing, the orientations of the stress axes are modified in the vicinity of the tip. This in turn causes the variations in
fracture orientation as the fracture propagates.
The kinematics of fracture propagation may be interpreted from plume structure. Hackles diverge in the direction of
propagation, while concentric ribs mark successive pauses in the position of the fracture tip.
J. Fractures | 119
Features of vein fills
When a joint aperture has been held open by fluid pressure during hydrothermal activity, mineral crystals may be
deposited on the walls, producing a vein. Crystals that grow into the fluid-filled spaces may be euhedral (showing clear
crystal surfaces) but more typically the crystals run into one another producing compromise boundaries that are also
approximately planar. There is often a tendency for crystals to get larger towards the centre of a vein.
Figure 8. Fibre-filled
veins, illustrating
features of syntaxial
Figure 7. Vein with non-fibrous fill and remaining unfilled (left) and antitaxial
void space (right) fibre fills.
There are actually two different styles of fibre fills that can be
found in veins. If the repeated cracking occurs in the centre of
the vein, the fibres are typically in crystallographic continuity
with the grains in the wall. Such veins are described as
Figure 9. Fibrous quartz filling a vein. The quartz fibres grew
syntaxial. Sometimes in cross-sections of syntaxial veins it’s simultaneously with vein opening, and track the relative
possible to pick out the line of separation running along the movement of the two walls. SE Ireland.
centre. In contrast, if the repeated cracking occurs at the edge,
then the vein is antitaxial. In antitaxial veins there is typically no single centre line, but there may be multiple strands of
wall-rock inclusions parallel to the walls of the vein, marking successive cracks.
120 | J. Fractures
Dynamic interpretation of fractures
Extension fractures
J. Fractures | 121
Common types of joint and vein systems
122 | J. Fractures
Joints related to erosion and exhumation
It’s common for joint sets to form parallel to the topographic surface in areas that have undergone rapid erosion. These
are known as sheeting or sheet joints, and the process is known as exfoliation. These joints are most conspicuous in
intrusive igneous rocks like granite, which are otherwise typically isotropic. In extreme cases, granite with many sheet
joints may be confused with a bedded sedimentary rock when viewed from a distance!
• In regions where the crust is in horizontal compression, σ3 is vertical. As overburden is removed by erosion, and
the mean stress is reduced, σ3 becomes negative (tensile). The rock tends to expand upward and does so by
forming roughly horizontal joints.
• Secondly, residual stresses may be locked into rocks at the time of formation, particularly during the cooling of
intrusions. If tensile stresses are perpendicular to contacts, these may lead to the formation of joints parallel to the
contacts when erosion reduces the overall pressure.
• Finally, weathering of igneous rocks leads to significant volume changes, as water is absorbed, and clay minerals
form. These volume changes may set up stresses that encourage exfoliation behaviour.
Faults and shear zones are typically associated with high densities of joints and
other fractures. One common geometry reflects the distribution of stress in a
developing fault zone. Repeated joints or veins are oriented at an angle of about
45° to a developing fault in a configuration called en echelon (derived from a
diagonal military formation). The joints or veins are formed by extension, and are
oriented perpendicular to σ3.
Figure 14. En-echelon
quartz veins in schist.
Amaliapolis, Greece.
J. Fractures | 123
Joints related to folds
A third type of fold-related veins occurs parallel to the profile plane of folds. Logically these are called profile veins
but they are also often called ac-veins, from an older terminology for folds, involving three “axes” a, b and c. (What we
now call the fold axis was axis b in this system). Profile joints and veins indicate that a component of extension occurred
along the length of the fold hinges.
124 | J. Fractures
• Lab 7. Fractures
In this lab, you will meet two new techniques on the stereographic projection that are particularly useful for the analysis
of joints and veins. Both involve small circles.
Figure 1. Un-oriented core showing orientations of veins (left) and locus of possible vein poles (right).
Many exploration programs are carried out to determine the location and orientation of buried mineralized veins.
Typically, diamond-drill holes will be drilled at various angles into the ground and cores will be recovered, showing the
orientation of the veins. Unfortunately, the drilling operation does not allow core to be recovered without rotating it in
the drill hole, so a single core does not provide a unique indication of the strike and dip of a vein. All we can determine
from a single core is that the pole to a vein must lie on a small circle on the stereographic projection (Fig. 1). It turns out
that intersecting small circles from 3 cores are necessary to uniquely determine the orientaiton.
Constructing small circles can be complicated. If the cores are horizontal, it is easy, because the Wulff and Schmidt nets
have small circles centred on the primitive. However, if the cores are plunging (the more usual case), constructing small
circles is more involved. There are two methods. Method 1 depends on a property of the Wulff net, on which all small
circles plot as true circles (as shown in Fig. 1) so it is possible to construct them with a plotting compass; however, the
centre of the projected circle does not match the axis of the small circle in 3-D, so the centre of the point has to be found
first. The process is simple if the small circles do not cross the primitive, but a little more involved if they do, as shown in
Figure 2. Method 2 depends on rotating the orientations of the two cores to the primitive to construct the small circles
there. Once the intersections are found, the rotation is reversed to find the true orientation of the intersections. The
second procedure works on either the Wulff or Schmidt net and is explained in detail in Figure 3.
Sometimes large numbers of joints are measured in a particular area. Geologists may want to know the mean orientation
of the joints, or to make statements about the variation in their orientation. Normal arithmetic methods for calculating
averages don’t work for orientation data, because orientations are vector quantities. (To understand the problem, try
finding the average of two trends close to north, 359° and 001°. The arithmetic average, 180° or due south, is obviously
nonsense!)
It’s usually more helpful to start with a contoured plot showing the density of poles on a stereographic projection.
Because we are analysing densities of poles, it is important to use an equal-area projection (Schmidt net) for this
process.
The first step in any contouring process is to superimpose the data on a grid. For this purpose you can either tape the
projection down onto a piece of graph paper or you can draw a grid directly on the projection. For the example in the
assignment, a grid has been drawn on a plot of poles.
Next, we need to find how many data points lie in each 1% of the net. To do this, a device called a counting circle is
helpful. It can be a piece of paper with a circular hole, or a piece of tracing paper with a circle drawn on it.
In either case, the diameter of the circle must be exactly one tenth of the diameter of the equal-area net; its area will
then be 1% of the net area.
Place the counting circle directly over a grid intersection on the equal area plot. Count the number of poles that fall
within the circle. Write this number on the grid intersection. Repeat with all the intersections in the plot.
For intersections that fall near the edge of the plot, part of the counting circle will fall outside the primitive. The points
that ‘should’ be in this part of the counting circle will appear on the opposite side of the net. We therefore use a second
device, called a peripheral counter, which has two counting circles, their centres spaced apart by the same distance as
the diameter of the net. A slot in the centre of the peripheral counter fits over the thumb tack in the middle of the plot,
so as to keep the counter correctly aligned. When one hole is centred over a grid intersection near the primitive, the
circle on the opposite side contains the extra points that should be counted.
Finally, make a smooth contour map of the results. As in all contouring, make sure that higher numbers all appear on
one side of a contour, and lower numbers on the other. Contours should never branch. In contouring, remember that
contour lines that disappear over the primitive should reappear on the opposite side of the net. Number the contour
lines in percent, meaning “percent of the data occurring in each 1 % of the plot area”.
Assignment
1. A mineral exploration company drilled three diamond drill holes to intersect a vein set in the subsurface. The
angles between the axes of the cores and the veins are shown in the following table.
Drill hole # Trend & plunge of hole Core-vein angle Core-pole angle
1 340-70 NW 40 50
2 080-76 NE 65 25
3 210-68 SW 54 36
2. You are provided with an equal area projection of 100 poles to conjugate shear fractures in the Cadomin
Formation from the Alberta foothills. To find the maximum densities of points, it is helpful to construct a
contoured plot. A grid has been constructed across the projection to assist with contouring.
a) First, cut out the centre counter and peripheral counting circles precisely. The counting circles have a diameter
exactly 10% of the plot, which means that their area covers 1% of the plot. Use the counting circles to mark
densities at the each grid intersection. Contour the resulting densities on the grid. Remember the principles
of contouring that you used in the first lab: each contour should separate higher from lower values; make the
contours as smooth as possible while honouring the data; contours should never branch. In addition, remember
you are really contouring on the surface of a sphere, and the pattern is symmetrical on the lower and upper
hemispheres. Therefore, if a contour disappears over the primitive, it should reappear on the opposite side of the
projection. When you are done, make a clean copy with selected contours on a separate tracing sheet.
b) Mark estimated centres, or modes, of the two density clusters. These are poles to the typical conjugate shear
planes. From these poles, determine the strike and dip of the two planes, and draw the planes as great circles on
your plot.
The maximum principal stress is predicted to bisect the acute angle between the two planes. The minimum
principal stress bisects the obtuse angle, and the intermediate stress is parallel to their intersection.
c) Mark the principal stresses on your contoured projection and determine the plunge and trend of each.
d) An oil company is interested in flow through extension joints in the Brazeau formation. Predict the orientation
of these joints based on your estimates of the directions of the principal stresses.
Lab 7. Question 2. Plot of poles to 100 shear fractures in Cardium Sandstone, Alberta Foothills.
3. *Look at the geological map of Canmore (east half) which shows numerous faults. Notice the band of dark blue
Palliser Formation in the region north of Exshaw.
a) Without using the cross-section, what is the evidence that the Palliser Formation dips to the SW in this area?
b) Now look at the Palliser Formation on cross-section 1, which extends into the sheet Canmore (west half). Place
two sheets of tracing paper so as to cover the cross-section, and trace only the base of the Palliser Formation
(DPa) and the faults that offset it. For each of the named thrust faults, answer the following questions:
c) Does the fault place older over younger or younger over older strata?
d) Estimate the the dip separation of the base of the Palliser formation. Note – if the fault is curved, you can
approximate the separation with a series of straight-line measurements with a ruler.
e) Estimate the throw and the heave. (These are straight line measurements even if the fault is curved.)
4. *Strictly speaking, you have no evidence for the direction of movement on the faults: – it could be exactly parallel
to the cross-section or there could be a component of strike-slip movement, in and out of the page. However, it is
clear that there has been substantial overall shortening of the rocks in the hanging wall of the lowest, McConnell
Thrust. Estimate this shortening in the line of the cross-section, as follows:
b) Measure the present-day distance l between the easternmost outcrop of the base of the Palliser, and the
western edge of the section.
Introduction
Strictly speaking, a fault is a single fracture surface. However, many mapped faults turn out to have multiple fault
strands, all roughly parallel, but branching and joining (“anastomosing”) along their strike. This type of fault array is
K. Faults | 133
called a fault zone. The total offset of the fault zone is distributed across the zone. Each fault in the zone offsets the
rocks on either side by a small amount. These add up across the fault zone to a much larger offset.
A related structure is a shear zone. A shear zone is the ductile equivalent of a fault zone – a belt of rock across which
movement has caused a significant amount of offset between the two sides. However, a shear zone is a ductile structure,
typically formed at depth where the deformation of the mineral grains is plastic, not brittle. The movement in a shear
zone is distributed across the zone, rather than being restricted to discrete brittle faults. It is likely that most faults that
deform the upper crust pass at depth into shear zones in the lower crust.
At [pb_glossary id=”779″]map scale[/pb_glossary], faults and shear zones look the same – a line across which older
structures are offset. At outcrop (mesoscopic) or microscopic scale they look rather different.
The orientation of natural faults often varies and they eventually disappear along strike; however, they do tend to have
surfaces that are more planar than other types of geological surfaces, at least over distances of a few kilometres. Faults
can be recognized at a variety of scales from centimetre-scale offsets in an individual outcrop to faults that can be traced
on the ground for tens to hundreds of kilometres such as the San Andreas Fault.
134 | K. Faults
Fault geometry
If a fracture is a fault, there will also be offsets of beds or other older surfaces that are cut. On a map or cross-section,
the points where the trace of a fault cuts the trace of an older surface are called cutoff points (or cut-off points). In three
dimensions, the lines where a fault intersects an older surface are called cutoff lines (Fig. 3). The distance between
the two cutoff lines, for a given surface, is called the separation of the surface. In plan view, as seen on a map of a
horizontal surface, the distance of offset measured parallel to the strike of the fault is called the strike separation. The
strike separation can be sinistral (also known as left-lateral) or it can be dextral (also known as right-lateral). In cross-
section view, parallel to the dip of the fault, the separation is called dip separation. If the beds in the hanging wall are
K. Faults | 135
offset below those in the footwall the separation is normal. If the beds in the hanging wall are offset above those in the
footwall then the separation is reverse. The vertical and horizontal components of dip separation were very important
in old mining operations, and are known as throw and heave respectively.
It’s important to realize that these measurements of separation are geometric. They tell you little about kinematics. In
the diagram below, the arrows on the fault plane show that an infinite number of slip directions is compatible with a
given fault separation.
One feature that may be recognized in the field and is a common result of relatively recent fault activity is the
development of a fault scarp, which is that part of the failure surface exposed by movement of the rock masses. In
studies of recent faults (neotectonics) the fault scarp may give an indication of separation.
However, over time the high-standing block tends to be levelled by erosion. The surface expression of the scarp is
subdued or eliminated and may be of little help in locating ancient faults. Where fault scarps do occur along ancient
faults, the direction of slope tends to be determined by which side has the more erosion-resistant rocks, not by the
sense of separation on the fault. In fact, locating faults in Precambrian terrains may be quite difficult because rocks
affected by faulting tend to be easily eroded. Such faults often occur in low-lying regions occupied by swamps, streams
or heavy vegetation.
Slip
The slip is a line that lies in the fault plane; slip represents the distance and direction of movement between the two
blocks of rock on either side of the fault. The slip is a vector – it has a distance and direction. The direction of slip may
be specified by trend and plunge, or by rake within the fault plane. When the rake of the slip is close to the strike of the
fault, the fault is called a strike-slip fault. When the rake is near 90°, close to the dip of the fault, the fault is a dip slip
fault.
136 | K. Faults
Figure 3. Fault plane intersecting a bedding surface, producing cutoff lines in the hanging wall and
footwall. Multiple possible slip vectors are compatible with the same geometry.
Piercing points
If we have a line that is cut and displaced by the fault, we can solve uniquely for
the slip vector. The intersection of a line with a fault plane produces a point,
called a piercing point. If we can locate the piercing points for the blocks on
either side of the fault then we will be able to determine the displacement vector
as shown in Figure 5. Figure 4. Slickenlines on a fault surface,
Arisaig, Nova Scotia.
K. Faults | 137
Figure 5. Piercing points on a linear feature uniquely define slip.
The slip is a line that lies in the fault plane, that represents the distance and direction of movement between the two
blocks of rock on either side of the fault. The slip is a vector – it has a distance and direction. The direction of slip may
be specified by trend and plunge, or by rake within the fault plane. When the rake of the slip is close to the strike of the
fault, the fault is called a strike-slip fault. When the rake is near 90°, close to the dip of the fault, the fault is a dip-slip
fault.
The question is, what will we use for a line cut by the fault? Recall that two non-parallel planes intersect along a line,
and you have your clue. If two planar features (such as veins, unconformities, formation boundaries, or igneous dykes)
intersect each other, then their line of intersection may in turn pierce the fault plane. Figure 6 shows an example where
an igneous intrusion is truncated by an unconformity at a subcrop line. Displacement along the fault offsets the subcrop
line producing piercing points for hanging wall and footwall. A unique vector joins the piercing points, characterizing
the fault displacement.
138 | K. Faults
Figure 6. Subcrop line defining slip of a fault.
Fold hinges also make excellent piercing points. Figure 7 shows an example.
K. Faults | 139
Figure 8 shows a second circumstance in which the net slip can be calculated. In this example, striations on the fault
surface (known as slickenlines) allow the direction of slip to be determined. It is then possible to construct artificial
piercing points on cutoff lines at opposite ends of a single slickenline. The amount of slip can be measured between the
constructed piercing points.
Components of slip
Once the net slip vector is known, it can be broken down into components. The component of slip parallel to the strike
of the fault is the strike slip. The strike slip may be characterized as sinistral (or left-lateral) or dextral (right-lateral).
The component parallel to the dip of the fault is called the dip slip. The dip slip may be characterized as normal or
reverse, depending on whether the hanging wall moved up or down relative to the footwall. If the dip slip is much larger
than the strike slip, then the fault is a dip-slip fault; the rake of the slip in the fault plane is close to 90°. If the strike slip
is much greater, then the fault is a strike-slip fault; the rake of the slip is close to zero or 180°. If the dip slip and strike
slip are of comparable magnitudes, then the fault is an oblique-slip fault.
Fault-plane sections
Most calculations involving fault slip are best carried out on a cross-section that lies in the fault plane. Figures 3, 5, 6,
and 7 are each illustrated with a diagram showing a fault-plane cross-section. Most of the significant measurements
of separation and slip can be made directly on the fault-plane cross-section. Of course, in general such a cross-
section will not be vertical. Special techniques are necessary for the construction of non-vertical cross-sections. A plan
view of a dipping geological surface is sometimes called an orthographic projection (because features are projected
140 | K. Faults
perpendicular to the surface onto a plane sheet of paper) and sometimes called a folding line construction (because we
treat the sloping fault plane as if we have folded it around one of its structure contours until it is in the horizontal plane
of a table top.) Typically, we begin by placing a sheet of paper with its edge along one of the structure contours on the
fault plane. This line becomes the folding line. Next, we use a stereographic projection or contours to determine the
rake of various lines on the fault surface and draw them in.
Sometimes it also helps to draw the projected structure contours as horizontal lines on a fault-plane section, to show
elevations above sea level (see fault-plane sections in Figures 3, 5, 6, and 7). The lines are not spaced as they would be
on a vertical cross section. If the contour interval is i and the fault plane has dip d, the spacing of the contours on the
fault plane section will be:
i’ = i / sin(d)
In the description of individual faults, it is generally possible to distinguish a core zone from a surrounding damage
zone.
In the core, the rock has been broken up and moved around by fault movement so that the original pieces are separated
from their neighbours. In the core zone it is no longer possible to see how the original pieces for faulted rock were
fitted together.
In the damage zone, the rocks are fractured and may show other deformation features such as folds. However, the
movement is not so great as to obliterate earlier structures, and it is at least possible to see how the pieces of damaged
rock can be fitted back together.
K. Faults | 141
Fault rocks: fault core
Several names are given to fragmented and other rocks of the fault core.
Breccia is a rock composed of typically angular fragments of the walls of the fault
that have been rotated and moved out of their original positions. The fragments
in a fault breccia may be huge, or may range down to about 2 mm. The term
microbreccia may be used for a fine-grained breccia. Although the grain-size
limits for breccia and microbreccia are not precisely standardized, it is reasonable
to use microbreccia for fragments that are 2-4 mm in diameter (by analogy with
the grain size of microconglomerate in sedimentary petrology).
Pseudotachylite is material that was melted by heating during fault movement. Pseudotachylite is typically dark and
very fine-grained or glassy. It may occur in small dykelets that penetrate the wall rock of the fault. Pseudotachylite
takes its name from an old term for a very fluid igneous lava, tachylite. Pseudo-tachylite looked the same but had a very
different origin.
Riedel shears are small shears that develop in response to stresses in the fault walls during fault propagation and
movement. Synthetic Riedel shears, or R-shears, have an orientation at about 15° to the main fault plane, and display
142 | K. Faults
the same sense of shear as the main fault, as shown in Fig. 10. Less commonly, antithetic Riedel shears, or R'-shears,
are also developed, at about 75° to the fault plane. These have a sense of shear opposite to that of the main fault. The
synthetic and antithetic shears form a conjugate set, and therefore can be used to indicate the orientation of the stress
axes when they formed.
Fault-bend folds. If a fault is curved, movement of the fault inevitably causes bending of either the hanging wall or
the footwall or both. (If this did not happen, caverns would open up within the Earth as faults moved; lithostatic
pressure prevents this from happening.) Fault-bend folds are particularly common in thrust belts like the Canadian
Rocky Mountains.
Figure 11. Fault-bend folds above thrust fault in siderite bed, Stellarton,
Nova Scotia.
Detachment folds. Sometimes, the amount of slip on a fault varies across the fault surface. Some sections have moved
more than others. At the boundary between the sections, deformation in the wall rocks becomes intense, sometimes
leading to the formation of detachment folds.
K. Faults | 143
Figure 12. Detachment fold, Mount Rundle.
Drag folds. Sometimes, a fault will ‘lock’ during its development, and if this happens deformation may be spread through
the wall rocks. If conditions are right, this deformation may be ductile and features in the wall rocks may be bent so
that they become folded. Such folds are called drag folds. Drag folds can closely mimic fault propagation folds (below)
that are formed at the tip of a fault as it develops. Many folds formerly categorized as drag folds are now interpreted as
fault-propagation folds.
Fault-propagation folds form as faults develop, and combine some of the features of fault-bend and detachment folds.
As a fault develops there will be a fault tip at the point separating slipped rock from rock that has not yet slipped. Fault-
propagation folds form at this fault tip, and shorten one wall of the fault relative to the other. They are also common in
thrust belts like the Rockies.
144 | K. Faults
Figure 14. Fault propagation fold (based on a computer
simulation by H. Charlesworth).
K. Faults | 145
Lab 8. Measuring Fault Slip
In Lab 7 you dealt with fault constructions that involved the separation of surfaces, but not with fault slip. This is because
cut-offs for a single plane surface are inadequate to determine the displacement vector, or slip of a fault. In this lab you
will analyse areas where piercing points can be located in both the footwall and hanging wall of a fault, allowing the true
slip to be determined.
Assignment
1.* Map 1 shows a simple map of a level landscape 500 m above sea level, in which a fault offsets a mafic dyke with a
strike separation of 450 m. Slickenlines on the fault trend toward the south and have rake of 060°. Determine the slip
of the fault.
a) *Plot the fault and the dyke as great circles on a stereographic projection. Also plot the slickenline lineation, and
the intersection line, where the fault and dyke intersect. Use a small ‘×’ for the linear data.
b) *Now draw a fault-plane cross-section, viewed from the southwest. This section will show what you would see
if you were able to remove the hanging wall block completely, and look directly at the fault face on the footwall.
The land surface should be a horizontal line at the top of the section. The cutoff-line of the dyke in the footwall
should be shown with its correct rake. Draw a few of the slickenlines, also with their correct rake.
c) *Now mark, using a dashed line, the cutoff of the dyke in the hanging wall (450 m across strike from its position
in the footwall). Draw a line between the two cutoffs, parallel to the slickenline orientation. This is the net
slip. Measure the distance of net slip and determine its trend and plunge from the stereographic projection.
Say whether the dip-slip component is normal or reverse. Say whether the strike-slip component is sinistral or
dextral.
2. Map 2 shows an area in which a thick sequence of conglomerate (circles) unconformably overlies mudstone (white)
and coal (black). The area is cut by a major fault running NE-SW approximately. To the east of the fault the coal is not
exposed, but three boreholes at A, B, and D encountered the coal at depth. Borehole C did not encounter coal. Your
objective is to determine the subsurface structure, so as to show the extent of coal in the subsurface. In addition, you
are to define the slip of the fault, using the subcrop of the coal below the unconformity.
a) Fault plane
i) Draw structure contours on the fault surface itself. Extrapolate contours down to sea level (0 m).
iii) Draw structure contours on the coal seam (assume that the coal seam is thin relative to the scale of the map,
and therefore treat it as a single surface). Terminate the contours where they intersect the fault.
v) Mark the subcrop line on the map where the unconformity surface cuts the coal seam.
iii) The borehole data allow the elevation of the coal seam to be calculated at three points (A, B & D). Use this
information to construct structure contours on the coal seam.
iv) From your contours, determine the strike and dip of the coal east of the fault.
v) Mark the subcrop line where the unconformity surface cuts the coal seam.
d) Separation: Next, investigate the separation of the surfaces that are cut by the fault.
i) Using intersecting contours, mark and label the cutoff lines where the fault intersects the coal seam in the
footwall and in the hanging wall. Between these two lines is a region where a drillhole would encounter no coal.
ii) Find the difference in elevation between the unconformity in the west and the same unconformity in the east.
This is the vertical separation of the unconformity at the fault – the vertical distance between a surface and
its projected counterpart from the other side of the fault. Because the surface is horizontal, it is also the throw
(vertical distance between the hanging wall and footwall cutoffs, measured down the dip of the fault plane).
iii) Find the difference in elevation for the coal seam on either side of the fault (the vertical separation). (Note:
Because the coal seam is gently dipping, its separation measurements – vertical separation, throw, and heave are
all slightly different from the corresponding measurements made on the unconformity, which is horizontal.)
iv) Find the distance measured along the strike of the fault, between equivalent structure contours on the coal
seam on either side of the fault. For example you might find the point where the east side 300 contour hits
the fault plane, and the point where the 300 contour on the west side hits the fault plane. This is the strike
separation of the fault. It corresponds to the distance that would appear between the two halves of the coal seam
if the land were eroded down to a horizontal surface.
v) Measure the heave of the fault at the coal seam, the width of the zone (measured perpendicular to the strike
of the fault) between the two cutoff lines.
vi) Superimpose a sheet of tracing paper on the map; on it, shade the area where the coal seam is present below
ground level. (Hint: To do this, the best argument is as follows. Originally the coal was present under the whole
area. Since deposition, coal has been ‘removed’ in three ways. First, some coal was removed by erosion prior
to deposition of the conglomerate, at the unconformity surface; second, coal is missing from the fault heave
between the two cutoff lines; third, more coal has been removed by erosion to the present-day topography. Once
you have removed all these areas, whatever is left is the area underlain by coal.)
• Use a piece of graph paper to make a fault plane cross-section, using the sea-level contour as a folding line.
The trace of the fault on the map is somewhat longer than a normal letter-size sheet of tracing paper, but you
will be able to show all the important intersections on a cross-section 25 cm (6.25 km) long, starting at the
southern boundary of the map. First, find the point where the sea-level (0 m) contour on the fault plane
intersects the south border of the map. Call this point X. Measure 25 cm NE along the contour and mark point
Y. Now take a sheet of graph paper and draw a horizontal line 25 cm long, about 5 cm up from the base of the
paper, and mark the ends X and Y.
• Next calculate the spacing of contours on the fault plane. If the fault has dip d, the contour spacing on the
section will be: i’ = i / sin(d)
ii) Add the footwall and hanging wall intersections.
• Place your graph paper with its top edge along the line XY on the map, and mark the places where the footwall
and hanging wall cutoff lines have known elevation. Project these points to their correct elevations on the
fault-plane section.
• Complete the cross-section by drawing the hanging wall and footwall traces of the unconformity and the coal.
Use solid lines to represent the footwall cutoff and dashed lines to represent the hanging wall cutoffs.
• Identify the piercing points where the subcrop line intersects the fault, in both the hanging wall and footwall.
Join the two points with a dash-dot line representing the net slip.
• Measure and record the distance of net slip.
• The component of net slip parallel to the fault strike is the strike slip. Draw and label the strike slip on the
fault-plane section, and record the distance of strike slip.
• The component down the dip of the fault is the dip slip. Draw the dip slip, and label it. Record the amount of
dip slip.
• Characterize the fault in words overall, as mainly strike-slip, intermediate (oblique-slip), or dip-slip. Say
whether the strike-slip component is sinistral or dextral. Say whether the dip-slip component is normal or
reverse.
i) Find the rake of the net slip in the fault plane, by measuring it with a protractor on the fault-plane section.
ii) Plot the fault plane, the orientation of the coal, the cutoff lines, and the net slip on a stereographic projection,
and determine the plunge and trend of the net slip.
Net slip:
Lab 8. Map 1.
Lab 8. Map 2.
Dynamics of faulting
Occurrence
Several parts of the Earth’s crust are undergoing horizontal extension and crustal thinning at the present day. The best
studied examples are probably the Basin and Range province of the western USA, and the East African Rift valley, which
extends several thousand kilometres through Africa.
We can find ancient examples too. They are particularly well studied underneath passive continental margins,
continental margins which are currently not located at a plate boundary. Passive margins mostly evolved from rift valleys
similar to the East African Rift, as continents stretched and separated in the past. For this reason we find rift structures
buried beneath passive continental margins in many parts of the world. Many of these contain significant petroleum
reservoirs. The Hibernia structure on Canada’s east coast, formed in a rift that developed as the Atlantic opened. Many
of the oilfields in the European North Sea occupy structures related to the Viking-Central Graben, buried beneath
younger sedimentary rocks in the North Sea.
These regions are dominated by normal faults, and in many rifts they have a roughly conjugate geometry: faults dipping
towards and away from each other with dips around 60°, at least near the surface. In many cases faults can be shown to
flatten at depth, giving them listric geometry, though in some cases this is controversial. Some cross-sections of rifts
show faults dipping at a constant angle down to a subhorizontal shear zone in the brittle crust at depth.
Normal faults in rifts do not occur in isolation. Often a cross-section through a rift will show dozens or hundreds of
normal faults. Special terms are given to features of normal fault arrays.
A horst is a block between two normal faults that dip away from each other, in opposite directions. The rocks in a horst
stand higher than the rocks on either side.
A graben is a block between two normal faults that dip towards each other. The rocks in a graben stand lower than the
rocks on either side.
A half-graben is a tilted block in a rift zone, that is also dropped down relative to the rocks on either side, but it only has
a fault on one side; the other side is typically gently folded.
In many rifts there are a few dominant normal faults with very large offsets. Faults that dip in the same direction are
described as synthetic to the main faults; faults that dip in the opposite direction are antithetic.
Thrust belts
Occurrence
Areas of crustal shortening, dominated by reverse faults, are active at the present day at convergent plate boundaries
(subduction zones), and in areas of continental collision: such as the Himalayas, and Taiwan.
Ancient examples occur in the Rocky Mountains formed in the late Mesozoic and early Cenozoic eras, and the
Appalachian Mountains of eastern North America, formed in the Paleozoic era.
In many cases, there is a sedimentary basin, called a foreland basin, adjacent to the thrust belt, and it is thought that
the weight of the thrust belt has depressed the lithosphere as it formed by isostasy. In western Canada, most of the
Cretaceous rocks formed in such a basin, including those that we see in the river valley in Edmonton.
Geometry: A thrust is any low-angle reverse fault, where low-angle is rather loosely defined. In fact, some thrust faults
are sufficiently curved so that portions would technically be normal faults!
Because of their low angle character, thrusts may look like stratigraphic contacts on maps. There may be closed outlines
of thrusts at hills and valleys.
Thrusts are influenced by stratigraphy. In many instances, the dip is steeper in competent rocks like limestone and
sandstone, and shallower in incompetent rocks like shale and evaporites (rock salt, gypsum, anhydrite).
Figure 6. Single thrust fault, showing fault-bend folds developed over ramps and flats.
The gentler portions are flats. They can be recognized on maps and cross-sections because the fault surfaces are almost
parallel to the stratigraphic boundaries.
Notice that once a fault has moved, there will be separation between the hanging wall ramps and the footwall ramps,
and between the hanging wall flats and the footwall flats. If fault-bend folding occurs, then the hanging wall flats may
acquire steeper dip and the hanging wall ramps may flatten, so this terminology may seem strange! They can still be
recognized by the characteristic cutoff angles of the strata.
A very extensive flat, where there has been a large amount of movement, is called a décollement surface, from a
French word meaning ‘unstick’. If the hanging wall has moved a long way relative to the footwall (tens of kilometres or
more), far enough that the hanging wall rocks were formed in a completely different environment from the footwall,
then the hanging wall is described as an allochthon (from two Greek words, meaning “other place”) and is said to be
allochthonous. The footwall of such a thrust is called the autochthon, and is said to be authochtonous.
For example, in Newfoundland there is a complex of thrust sheets known as the Humber Arm Allochthon that is
composed of Cambrian and Ordovician deep-water sedimentary rocks and ophiolites from the floor of the Iapetus
Ocean. It was thrust on top of sedimentary rocks of more or less the same age range that were formed on a continental
shelf, and therefore represent a very different environment.
Folds may form in association with thrust faults. A wide variety of fold styles are recognized but we will recognize just
three types:
Detachment folds: formed where the slip changes, and distortion is accommodated in the hanging wall;
Fault-propagation folds: formed where the dip and the slip change, typically where a fault tip climbs up a ramp during
fault-propagation.
In reality there are many variations on these themes. In particular, there is probably a continuous variation between the
idealized detachment and fault propagation folds.
Vergence is a useful concept in dealing with arrays of thrusts. The vergence of a structure is the direction in which
rocks near the surface have moved relative to rocks deeper down. In some thrust arrays, all the thrusts have the same
vergence: that is to say the hanging walls have all been displaced the same way relative to the footwall. Large parts of
the Rocky Mountain thrust belt show eastward vergence, for example. The foreland is the area towards which most of
the thrusts verge: in the Rockies, that is the plains of Alberta. The opposite side of the thrust belt, the side from which
most of the thrust sheets appear to come, is called the hinterland.
Once we start looking at multiple thrusts things can get quite complicated. It is common for multiple listric thrust faults
to branch upward from a single flat. This configuration is called an imbricate fan. The point where one thrust fault
branches from another is called a branch point. In an imbricate fan the branch points mark places where one fault
branches into two as you follow it towards the foreland. This type of branch point is a trailing branch point.
Sometimes imbricate thrust faults merge into flats both upward and downward. Such a configuration is called a duplex.
The upper flat is a roof thrust while the lower flat is the floor thrust of the duplex. Like an imbricate fan, the thrusts in
a duplex join downwards at trailing branch points. However, they also join upwards at leading branch points.
Sometimes faults in thrust belts have opposing vergence. A pair of opposed thrusts that meet in the subsurface is called
a tectonic wedge. If a third thrust cuts off a triangular section of rock, the wedge is called a triangle zone. The earliest oil
discoveries in the foothills of the Canadian Rockies were found in a triangle zone in the Turner Valley area of southern
Alberta.
Strike-slip zones
Occurrence
Some of the Earth’s best-known faults are strike-slip faults: the San Andreas in California is one of the best-known and
best studied. Other strike-slip faults that have histories of damaging earthquakes include the North Anatolian Fault in
Turkey and the Alpine Fault in New Zealand. Strike-slip faults that are also plate boundaries are called transform faults.
Anderson’s theory of faulting predicts that strike-slip faults should be characteristic of the wrench regime, and that
those faults should be near-vertical. Most major strike-slip faults are found to dip steeply, confirming Anderson’s
prediction. As a result, their traces tend to be very straight lines on geological maps.
It is also quite common to see subsidiary strike-slip faults, which may include Riedel shears. Dextral synthetic Riedel
shears would be predicted at about 15° clockwise from our overall dextral strike-slip zone, while sinistral antithetic
Riedel shears would be about 75° clockwise from the overall direction of dextral strike slip. (Reverse everything for a
sinistral zone.)
All these orientations work for fault zones where the overall amount of strain is small. Strike-slip deformation includes
a strong component of rotation, so as deformation continues, all the structures will be rotated. One of the challenges in
interpreting strike-slip motion is that structures may have rotated out of the orientations in which they formed.
Transtension
The above predictions apply to ideal strike-slip motion. However, many of the most interesting structures in strike-slip
zones are formed where there are departures from ideal strike-slip.
One common environment of transtension is at a releasing bend (also known as a releasing stepover) on a strike-slip
fault. If a dextral fault steps to the right, or a sinistral fault steps to the left, the resulting bend is said to be releasing,
and the rocks adjacent to the fault are affected by transtension.
A releasing bend typically develops a localized, parallelogram-shaped subsiding area called a pull-apart basin. In the
Los Angeles area, pull-apart basins associated with the San Andreas system host important natural resources of oil and
natural gas. In Nova Scotia, the Stellarton Basin, also a pull-apart basin on a dextral strike-slip fault system, was a prolific
producer of coal in the 20th century.
In cross-section, pull-apart basins tend to be bounded by families of faults that steepen downwards and merge into a
single fault or shear zone at depth. Individual faults may have normal, strike slip, or oblique slip. This type of fault array
is called a negative flower structure.
Figure 9. Transtension and transpression at releasing and restraining bends on a dextral strike-slip fault.
Transpression
A combination of strike-slip motion with shortening is called transpression. In transpression there is a component
of crustal thickening, along with strike slip, so transpression zones tend to form narrow uplifts, ranges of hills or
mountains.
One common environment of transpression is at a restraining bend (also known as a restraining stepover) on a strike-
slip fault. If a dextral fault steps to the left, or a sinistral fault steps to the right, the resulting bend is said to be
restraining, and the rocks adjacent to the fault are affected by transpression.
A restraining bend typically develops a localized uplift. Parts of the transverse ranges of California, and the Southern
Alps of New Zealand, are associated with transpression at restraining bends along major transform faults.
In cross-section, transpressional ranges tend to be bounded by families of faults that steepen downwards and merge
into a single fault or shear zone at depth. Individual faults may have reverse, strike slip, or oblique slip. This type of fault
array is called a positive flower structure.
Anderson, E. W. 1905. The dynamics of faulting. Transactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society 8, 387-402.
Introduction
Geologists in the field often need to be able to record the relationships between a set of outcrops so as to collect the
most useful information for geological map construction in the shortest time. Mapping geologists always carry some
kind of base map on which to record their observations. For mapping large areas this might be a topographic map at any
scale between 1:10,000 and 1:50,000. For a small area it may be a sheet of gridded paper on which the geologist records
both geologic and topographic information. Recording information directly on the map while in the field is essential; that
way, cross-cutting relationships such as faults, intrusions, and unconformities can be swiftly and directly portrayed on
the map. Also, you will find out whether you need to collect more evidence for a critical relationship before you leave the
field. Modern methods of surveying, particularly the use of the Global Positioning System (GPS), have greatly assisted
map-making at large scale. However, portable GPS units often give errors of 5 m or more in location. Detailed field
relationships may still need to be surveyed using tape-and-compass or pace-and-compass methods.
This exercise will take place at a location where you can practise mapping techniques with a variety of rock types and
structures. Your instructors or teaching assistants will show you the area to be covered. For this exercise you will need
a notebook, a clipboard and a sheet of graph paper, coloured and lead pencils, a compass-clinometer, and your legs!
You will also need to be appropriately dressed and equipped for working outdoors. For all geological fieldwork, it is
important to carry clothing and equipment appropriate to the range of possible conditions you may encounter.
At the University of Alberta, this lab will take place in the Geoscience Garden, a facility that is set up to enable you to practise
mapping techniques with a variety of rock types and structures without leaving campus. Despite its nearby location, you
will still need to be prepared for work outdoors. The weather in Edmonton can be unpredictable. You will probably need
gloves and you may also need a waterproof coat and footwear. Alternatively, if it is sunny you may need sunscreen and a
hat.
Make sure that your compass-clinometer is correctly set for magnetic declination at your location.
For example, in Edmonton AB, Canada, at the beginning of 2020, the declination was 13.8° East
Assignment
The mapping area is large and contains a wide variety of rocks. Your teaching assistants will designate an area for the
mapping exercise.
1. * When mapping, it is helpful to be able to estimate short distances by pacing. A tape measure will set up on to
extend 50 m or more through the mapping area. Pace along the tape at least three times to establish the
approximate length of your pace. The most convenient method is to count one for each double pace (one-and-
two-and-three…). In other words count a pace each time your left foot hits the ground. Pace naturally as you
would while walking. Don’t stretch or try to pace extra long steps.
Divide 50 by the average number of paces to get the length of your pace. Round it to a convenient number
like , etc., so that you can approximately convert paces to metres in your head (measurements
approximated to the nearest 1 m are quite good enough).
Also, measure the trend of the tape, and if your basemap has topographic features, locate the tape by pacing from
one end of it to a topographic feature.
2. * Using the scale of your map, draw a line on the graph paper to represent the tape.
3. Choose one outcrop of sedimentary rock and make a detailed description of the rock type(s) as an entry in your
notebook. Give the entry a number. Your description should include grain size, grain shape (if visible), composition
(if you can tell), primary structures (bedding, lamination, cross-lamination, etc.), and secondary structures (folds,
fractures, fabrics). Points to remember in making good field notes:
4. Measure the orientation of any layering you see, and identify the type of layering (lamination, bedding, gneissic
banding, etc.
5. Make a diagram of a any evidence that tells you whether the beds are upright or overturned. Points to remember
in making a good field diagram:
• Draw what you actually observe: it’s better to draw a small part of the rock well rather than a large part
showing what you think you should see;
• Your diagram does not have to be artistic. In the field you can take a photo to supplement your diagram, but..
• Your diagram must have labels to indicate what is represented. (You can’t include these on a photo, so even if
you have a camera, making a labelled diagram is still important.)
• Make sure you include an approximate scale bar;
• Include an indication of the orientation of the view, that shows whether you are looking at a plan or a cross-
section.
6. Locate the outcrop on the map; if necessary, draw its outline at approximately the right size and shape. Lightly
Map observations
7. Locate and describe the other outcrops in the designated area of the garden. Number your notebook entries and
mark the locations on the map. When the rock types are similar, your descriptions can be brief; you need only
describe major differences. However, you should try to measure at least one strike and dip at each outcrop. In the
course of mapping you may encounter folds or faults; measure the orientations of these structures.
8. You will encounter a variety of rock types. Make sure you make a full description of each new rock type in your
notebook. Try to group the rocks you observe into formations. Give each new formation a distinct colour, and build
a legend to the colours on a spare part of the map or in your notes.
Interpreting boundaries
9. As you encounter differences between rock types, try to mark where boundaries might be using dashed lines.
Remember, boundaries between sedimentary rock units tend to be parallel to the strike. After you have decided
where boundaries are, very lightly shade the area where you think each formation is present between the
observable outcrops.
Do not leave the field area until your map shows an interpretation of the geology throughout the are, with clear
interpreted boundaries between units. You can judge the effect of topography much better in the field than in the
lab, so complete the map in the field.
Your map must be approved by an instructor or teaching assistant before you leave the field.
10. On your return to the lab, make a good copy on tracing paper. Mark symbols for the strike and dip of bedding, and
any other structures, this time by measuring them accurately. If you cannot place the symbol exactly on the
outcrop without making the map confusing, offset it slightly to the side, shifting it in the direction of its own strike
or trend.
11. If you encountered a fault or faults, use your observations at a fault to determine the approximate slip, using the
same method you used in Lab 8. If you think the area contains a fold, determine the orientation of the fold axis
and axial surface, using the same method you used in Lab 6.
Introduction
The Foothills, Front Ranges and Main Ranges of the Canadian Cordillera are one of the world’s best described fold
and thrust belts, in which sedimentary strata have been shortened by hundreds of kilometres while remaining at low
temperature and showing, at most, low grade metamorphism. Other examples of fold and thrust belts include the
Appalachian Valley and Ridge province the eastern U.S., the Jura Mountains in the Swiss Alps, and the Moine Thrust
zone in NW Scotland. Many of these belts contain substantial reservoirs of oil and natural gas in structural traps, and
therefore considerable effort has gone into understanding their geometry and kinematics.
Because of the relatively low temperatures at which the rocks were deformed, there are strong contrasts between
competent lithologies (typically limestones and sandstones) and incompetent lithologies (typically shales and
evaporites). As a result, faults tend to follow ramp–flat trajectories through the stratigraphy, and most folds are related
to variations in the slip or dip of faults (or both). Also, competent lithologies tend to be translated large distances without
large amounts of internal distortion, except at the hinges of folds. Therefore, fold and thrust belts often show layers
that maintain their original thicknesses; folds of this style are called parallel folds (Fig. 1). These properties are helpful
in the construction of cross-sections, especially in areas where the sheer number of faults and folds make conventional
structure contouring difficult.
In the first part of this lab, you will explore two techniques for constructing cross-sections through subhorizontal folds
that are useful in preliminary work on thrust-related folds.
Parallel folds are also sometimes called concentric folds, because the curved arcs are parallel, and are centred on
common centres. When a stack of layers exhibits this special geometry, it is possible to make predictions of the
continuation of structures at depth that assist with cross-section construction. We will use the Busk or Arcconstruction
to reconstruct the folds. This construction assumes folds are cylindrical and horizontal folds and the layers have
concentric geometry. The first few steps in this technique are illustrated in Figures 2 and 3. There is also a helpful tutorial
on the worldwide web at the website of Steven Dutch (University of Wisconsin):
In some fold and thrust belts, it has been shown that instead of displaying smooth arcs like those postulated in the
Busk construction, folds display straight limbs and angular hinges, like kink folds. This observation leads to the kink
construction, in which folds are assumed to have straight limbs and angular hinges. Because beds have the same
thickness on opposite limbs of each fold, the axial surfaces exactly bisect the inter-limb angles. In the kink construction,
rounded fold hinges are approximated by multiple angular folds. Although kink folds depart from parallel geometry at
the hinges, these hinge regions are very narrow; as a result, sometimes the kink and Busk constructions give rather
similar results. First steps in the construction are illustrated in Figures 4 and 5. There is also a helpful tutorial on the
worldwide web at the website of Steven Dutch (University of Wisconsin). Note, however, that the tutorial makes different
assumptions about the locations of fold hinges, compared with the exercise in the assignment, where fold hinges are
explicitly located.
Assignment
You are provided with a cross-section through an area of horizontal cylindrical folds, with subsurface
information from a single borehole. The scale is 1:10,000, without vertical exaggeration. Dip measurements are
shown at intervals at ground level. Make a cross-section using the Busk, or arc construction.
• To execute the Busk construction, draw a line perpendicular to the dip at each point where the dip was
measured. (Use a protractor and the numerical value of dip from the section.) These lines are called dip
normals. Give them letters A, B, C, etc.
• Find a place where there is stratigraphic information located between two adjacent dip normals e.g. between
A and B. Use a compass with its point placed on the intersection of the bedding normals to extend the
stratigraphic boundaries as far as those normals.
• Continue with the next pair of dip normals, using a compass to extend the boundaries, until the section is
complete. You may assume that the strata beyond the right-hand end of the section dip at a constant 29°.
• The borehole is extended and encounters the base of the Saltmines Gypsum, which is 450 m thick. Add the
base of the Gypsum to the cross section. Notice how the assumption of parallel folding breaks down at depth.
(You may find it easiest to start at both ends of the section, measuring the 450 m of gypsum perpendicular to
bedding in each case, and working toward the ‘difficult’ part in the centre.) Why would you expect the gypsum
to behave differently?
• At each fold hinge, construct an axial trace that bisects the bedding dips on either side. the easiest way to do
this is to add the two dips, and divide by 2; this gives the angle from vertical of the bisector. (Be careful if the
dips are in opposite directions; you will need to count one as negative and the other as positive.)
• Then draw the stratigraphic boundaries on either side of the axial trace; you should find that the thickness of
each unit is unchanged as it crosses the fold. Complete the cross-section as before. Make sure you add the
base of the Gypsum as before.
Map 1 represents a faulted and folded area in a thrust belt. Using the relationships between outcrop shape
and topography, structure contours, and fault-bedding intersection lines (cut-off lines), your objective is to
determine the structure of the area and construct an accurate cross-section along the marked line.
Look at the outcrop pattern. Both the stratigraphic units and the faults generally have sinuous outcrop patterns
that roughly follow contours in parts of the map, suggesting that in these areas both the faults and the
stratigraphic units mostly have gentle dips. The repetition of stratigraphic units suggest a dipping fault has
caused repetition of stratigraphy. The patterns of faults and outcrops on either side of the main valleys are
rough mirror images of each other, suggesting that the valleys have been eroded through structures that are
now exposed in both valley sides. Any thrust belt map has a lot of surfaces. Identify the major stratigraphic
boundaries and faults with colours as you have done in previous maps. Use red for faults, blues, greens and
browns for stratigraphic surfaces.
b) Cut-off lines
A useful first step is to identify cut-off points, where faults intersect stratigraphic units, and connect them, where
possible, to draw cut-off lines. Remember that for each surface cut by a fault, there will be a hanging wall cut-off
line and a footwall cut-off line. You may notice that corresponding cut-off points have similar elevations on each
side of the main valleys. This suggests that the cut-off lines are almost horizontal. Draw possible cut-off lines on
the map.
c) Structure contours
Now try to draw structure contours on the dipping surfaces. Note that, because we are in a thrust belt, that
surfaces may be repeated, so you may have more than one set of contours on the same surface.
Try to use the minimum number of lines to build the cross-section; however if your map becomes cluttered and
difficult to understand, you may wish to use tracing paper for some of the contour sets. Make sure you record
the position of the corners of the base map on your tracing paper so that it can easily be located, but do not
attempt to trace all the detail from the map onto your tracing paper.
d) Cross-section
Shear zones are zones of intense ductile deformation that are thin relative their lateral extent. Shear zones, like faults,
typically show offsets of older structures, but unlike faults, they lack through-going brittle fractures.
In practice, faults and shear zones are closely related. Many major structures that are faults at the Earth’s surface
probably connect with ductile shear zones at depth, and in the transition it is common to find composite zones that
display combinations of brittle fracture and ductile flow.
At map scale, shear zones can look just like faults, and they display all the same types of geometric relationships (offset,
separation, throw, heave, etc.). We will not repeat those definitions in this section.
At outcrop and microscopic scale, though, ductile shear zones are characterized by planar and linear fabrics. Grain-size
reduction is also common. When it was originally described, the metamorphic rock-type produced by this grain-size
reduction was thought to be a product of brittle grinding (cataclasis) and the rock was named mylonite from a Greek
word for milling flour. We now know better – the fine grain-size is the product of dynamic recrystallization – the
breakdown of the original mineral grains, and growth of new, resulting from the accumulation of defects that result from
extreme plastic deformation.
Where the kinematics of shear zones can be determined, most show a large component of rotational deformation and
many turn out to have undergone progressive simple shear. However, the strain is often heterogeneous, and different
parts of the shear zone show different parts of the strain history, a phenomenon known as strain partitioning.
The typical geometry of a shear zone is therefore a band of heterogeneous simple shear, across which previous
structures are offset.
The overall strain inside a zone of ideal simple shear varies. The incremental strain typically shows strain axes at about
45° to the shear zone boundary, but the finite strain shows the effects of rotation: with increasing deformation the shape
of the strain ellipse becomes more and more extreme and the extension direction (X or S1) rotates closer and closer to
the shear zone boundary. Although the extension direction never quite becomes parallel to the shear zone boundary, in
cases of extreme deformation, the difference in direction may be almost imperceptible.
Fabrics
The most basic pattern of foliation in a shear zone is known as sigmoidal oblique foliation. Thisis the fabric that is
produced by the flattening of particles or domains (clasts, mineral grains, etc.)in the protolith (the original rock), when
heterogeneous simple shear takes place.
In the least deformed, marginal parts of the shear zone, the foliation is weak, and oriented ataround 45° to the shear
zone. Towards the centre of the shear zone the foliation intensifies with increasing strain, and it curves so that it is
near-parallel to the overall shear zone. The sense of rotation of the foliation with increasing strain (whether clockwise
or counter-clockwise) shows thesense of shear on the zone.
Lineations
Associated with sigmoidal foliation, the stretched particles of the protolith typically are extended and define a
stretching lineation which gives a streaky appearance to the foliation surface. The orientation of this lineation, when
visible, and its rake in the foliation surface, are important quantities to measure in the field description of a shear zone.
Shear bands
Shear band foliations are geometrically very similar to C-S foliations. They form later in the history of a shear zone,
typically after a strong foliation has been developed throughout. Shear bands take the form of a new set of smaller shear
zones that offset the original foliation. In a dextral shear zone they are clockwise from the original C-planes; in a sinistral
shear zone the orientation is counter-clockwise. Shear bands are also known by the names “extensional crenulation
cleavage” and “C-prime (C') foliation“.
It’s possible to learn what goes on in mylonite formation by looking at microscopic thin sections from shear zones. In this
type of work it’s important to collect oriented rock samples. Typically this is done by marking a strike and dip symbol
on a surface of the rock, before the sample is removed with a hammer. Any surface can be marked: a foliation surface or
an arbitrary weathering surface. It’s important to note whether the marked surface is a top surface or an overhanging
Mortar structure
Eventually the recrystallized material surrounds the original crystals, producing what is known as mortar structure
(because it looks like bricks and mortar) or core and mantle structure.
Mylonitic rocks
• Mylonite
• Ultramylonite
Because they are less deformed than the surrounding material, porphyroclasts represent sites of strain partitioning, and
sometimes give away the sense of shear in a mylonite. There are two distinctive styles.
• Sigma structure
The foliation sweeps around a sigma porphyroclast in a somewhat rhombic shape, rather like a “small island of
S-plane” in a sea of C-plane. Just like C-S fabric it can therefore indicate sense of shear. It is named after the
shape of the Greek lowercase letter sigma: σ.
• Delta structure
If the porphyroclast is affected more by the rotation component of deformation, it, together with the foliation in
the adjoining matrix, may be rolled together into a delta porphyroclast named for the Greek letter delta: δ.
Asymmetric folds
Refolded folds
Sheath folds
Figure 10. Development of folds in shear zones. In (a), an
asymmetric fold is developed, which tightens in (b). In (c), a
As folds in shear zones tighten, small irregularities on their second asymmetric fold re-folds the first. Alternatively, in (d)
hinges are also amplified, with the result that fold hinges may the asymmetric fold develops a strongly curved hinge,
becoming a sheath fold.
become strongly curved into geometries that resemble the
finger of a glove. These are known as sheath folds, and are characteristic of highly noncoaxial deformation.
Occurrence of impacts
Extra-terrestrial objects impact the Earth sporadically. There is an inverse relationship between size of object and
recurrence interval, although the exact numbers vary depending on whether one considers objects entering the
atmosphere or only those that make it to the surface.
• 10 m diameter: approx. 1 yr
• 50 m diameter: approx. 1000 yr
• 1 km diameter: approx. 500,000 yr
• 5 km diameter: approx. every 10 M yr
• 10 km diameter: 65 Ma event was probably most recent
The object that exploded in the atmosphere over Russia in February 2013 is estimated to have been ~17 m in diameter.
Objects approaching the Earth may vary in speed between about 11 km s‑1 and 72 km s‑1, though smaller objects are
slowed by drag from the atmosphere.
Meteorite impacts produce some of the highest strain rates on Earth. Typical values of strain rate in the first few
microseconds of an impact may be of the order of 108 s‑1. (Contrast the strain rates during an earthquake, typically
0.1 to 10 s-1. By comparison, time-averaged strain rates in orogens due to plate movement are typically 10‑15 to 10‑12 per
second.)
One of the most obvious results of an impact is a roughly circular depression called a crater. Major craters have been
described from many parts of the Earth. The three largest confirmed examples are:
1. Vredefort Crater in South Africa, diameter ~300 km, formed at 2020 Ma, and now deeply eroded;
2. Sudbury Basin, 250 km diameter, formed at 1849 Ma and subsequently deformed;
Impact craters
Larger impacts form craters, which have two types of geometry (Fig. 1).
Simple craters
Simple craters are up to about 4.5 km in diameter. They tend to have simple bowl shapes with a raised rim. (On the
moon, where gravity is less, simple craters are up to 15 km diameter.)
Complex craters
Larger craters show complex geometry. The most distinctive feature of complex craters is a central uplift. The inside
of the rim of a complex crater typically shows a series of internal terraces, and the outside of the rim may also
have concentric ridges and valleys. Between the central uplift and the terraces, the floor of a complex crater is often
somewhat flat. These differences may be explained by considering the processes of crater formation, and particularly
the “modification stage” (see below).
Initially the compressional wave moves rock downward and outward but as the wave expands material is pushed
upwards at the edges of the expanding crater, creating a raised rim. In addition, as the decompression wave passes,
material that was formerly compressed downwards expands upward, and its momentum causes it to be thrown up into
the atmosphere. These processes result in the excavation of material (ejecta), into the air and onto the surrounding
surface. The resulting depression is known as the transient crater.
The maximum size of the transient crater marks the end of the excavation phase. The excavation stage lasts several
minutes in a large crater.
The end of the excavation is followed by crater modification. For small craters the modification process is relatively
simple. The floor of the deep transient crater rebounds as the rock decompresses, to produce a shallower, bowl-shaped
depression.
In larger impacts, the process is more complex. Rebound of material that has been compressed vertically downward
is more complete and produces a central uplift. Surrounding it is a region where rebound takes material upwards and
outwards, contributing to the rim. In addition, the rims of these larger craters tend to be unstable, and during the
modification stage, large normal faults form, allowing pieces of the rim to subside as terraces.
Ejecta tend to fall back into the crater, and material may remain molten for long enough to pond on the crater floor.
Large complex craters tend to have flat floors between the central uplift and the terraced rim.
There are a number of products of impacts that can be recognized in the ancient record.
Shatter cones
Shatter cones are conical joint surfaces that are typically decorated with plumose markings. Poles to the surfaces of the
cones typically fall on small circles when plotted on a stereographic projection. The axes of the cones point toward the
point of impact and can help to locate this point if their orientations are carefully measured.
In the Sudbury structure a thick layer of impact melt underwent Figure 6. Impact melt (above) intruding granitoid rock (below),
fractional crystallization to yield a thick ore body of massive Sudbury, Ontario.
sulphide.
New minerals
The very high pressures encountered in the contact and compression stage may cause new, high pressure minerals to
form. The most notable are two high-pressure polymorphs of silica SiO2. Coesite is a monoclinic form of silica in which
the silica tetrahedra are linked in a manner similar to feldspars. It requires pressures above 2 GPa to form. Stishovite is
a very dense phase in which the silicon is in octahedral coordination, surrounded by six oxygen atoms in a tetragonal
structure. Stishovite requires pressures above 8 GPa.
Diaplectic glass
Mineral grains that are subject to extreme and rapid compression may lose their mineral structure, as bonds between
the atoms are broken. On decompression, depending on the temperature, the atoms may be unable to diffuse back
A transition or boundary between continental and oceanic lithosphere that coincides with a plate boundary (ridge,
trench or transform fault).
Allochthon
A body of rock that has been moved from its original position, usually in the hanging wall of a thrust fault
Allochthonous
Moved from its original position, usually in the hanging wall of a thrust fault
Angular unconformity
An unconformity characterised by an angular discordance (a difference of strike or dip or both) between older strata
below and younger strata above.
Anticline
A fold in which the younging direction is away from the inside of the fold.
Antiform
A fold where the limbs dip away from the hinge so that the fold closes upward.
Antitaxial vein
A vein filled with mineral fibres, in which the fibres have grown outwards, toward the walls.
Subsidiary fractures that form at about 75° to a fault, with sense of displacement opposite to that of the fault.
Apparent dip
The apparent dip of a surface is its dip measured on a cross-section that is not perpendicular to the strike of the
surface. Apparent dip is always less than true dip.
Arc construction
Busk construction
Attitude
Orientation
Glossary | 185
Autochthon (autochthonous)
A body of rock that has not been moved from its original position, usually in the footwall of a thrust fault
Imaginary surface that passes through all the hinge lines of a fold
Azimuth
Bar
Bathymetric contour
Contours that show the depth of the sea floor below sea level .
Bearing
Beds
Boudin
A structure formed by a layer that has separated into pieces, typically as a result of extension.
Branch point
Breccia
A rock composed of typically angular fragments, typically from a fault. (The term breccia is also sometimes used in
sedimentary geology for an angular conglomerate.)
186 | Glossary
Busk construction
A construction for folds in profile view in which the traces of surfaces are assumed to be concentric arcs of circles.
Also known as the arc construction.
C-plane
A surface within a shear zone that is characteristically parallel to the zone boundaries and which shows the most
intense deformation; from the French word "cisaillement" meaning shearing.
Shear bands that form later in a history of a shear zone after a strong foliation has been developed throughout.
They are typically oriented oblique to the shear zone boundaries, with the same sense of rotation (clockwise or
counterclockwise) as the overall shear zone.
C-S foliation
Foliation in a shear zone characterized by intensely strained zones roughly parallel to the shear zone (C planes) and
less strained zones where the foliation is oblique (S-planes).
Cataclasite
Chill zone
Typically finer-grained material found near the edge of an igneous intrusion, typically formed by rapid coolling
Boudins that are roughly equant in plan view, produced by extension of a layer in all directions
Cleavage refraction
A change in the orientation of cleavage caused by differences in the mechanical properties of layers. Cleavage
typically bends so that it is more perpendicular to competent layers, and more parallel to incompetent layers.
clinometer
Clinometer (inclinometer)
Coaxial deformation
Deformation in which the strain axes remain fixed to the rock material throughout deformation
Coesite
A monoclinic form of silica in which the silica tetrahedra are linked in a manner similar to feldspars. It requires
pressures above 2 GPa to form.
Glossary | 187
Columnar joints
Joints that separate elongated bodies of rock that are typically polygonal (roughly hexagonal) in cross-section. These
typically form perpendicular to the base and top of an igneous flow or sill.
Compaction
Compass
A tool which uses the Earth's magnetic field to measure directions parallel to the Earth's surface.
Competence
Complex crater
Compromise boundaries
Approximately planar boundaries produced when mineral grains grow against one another. Compromise boundaries
are not controlled by the crystal structure of either mineral grain.
Concentric joints
Fractures formed when when rocks fail simultaneously along two families of planes approximately 60° apart in
orientation.
Contour
A curving line on a map that separates higher values of some quantity from lower values.
Contour interval .
Contour spacing
Convolute lamination
A soft-sediment deformation structure in which laminae are deformed into complex chaotic folds.
Core zone
The central part of a fault, in which brittle deformation has destroyed the continuity of older structures.
188 | Glossary
Crater
Crenulation cleavage
Planar fabric represented by closely spaced fold axial surfaces. Almost always a second or later generation of fabric.
Crenulation lineation
Crest point
Crest surface
Cross bedding
Cross lamination
Cross stratification
A configuration of laminae produced by migration of bedforms during sedimentation, in which laminae are oriented
at an angle to the depositional horizontal.
Culmination point
Cutoff line
Cutoff point
The point on a cross-section where the trace of a fault cuts the trace of an older surface.
Cylindrical fold
A fold with a well defined axis that is everywhere parallel to the folded surface. Parallel cross-sections cut in
multiple positions through the fold appear identical to each other.
Damage zone
The outer part of a fault, in which remnants of pre-existing structures can still be traced.
Décollement
A very extensive flat in on a thrust fault, where there has been a large amount of movement.
Glossary | 189
Deformation
Delta pyroclast
A prophyroclast around which foliation curves in a tightly curved shape, formed as the porphyroclast and adjacent
foliated rock are rotated in a shear zone.
Depression point
Analysis comprising records of the positions, orientations, sizes, and shapes of structures that exist in the Earth's
crust at the present day.
Detachment fold
A fold produced when wall rocks accommodate variations in slip between different parts of a fault.
Deviatoric stress
The state of stress obtained when the mean stress is subtracted from each of the principal stresses. The deviatoric
stress is the part of the stress system that acts to change shape.
Dextral
Right-lateral movement: relative to an observer looking toward a fault or shear zone, the far side appears to have
moved right.
diaplectic glass
Differential stress
Crenulation cleavage combined with pressure solution cleavage, producing a foliation that is characterized both by
folds and by parallel domains of different composition.
dike
Dilation
Dip
The value of the inclination of a plane. Represents the inclination of steepest line that can be drawn on the plane.
190 | Glossary
Dip direction
The azimuth of the steepest inclined line that can be drawn on the plane.
Dip separation
The distance along a fault, measured in the direction of fault dip, between two cutoff lines of the same severed
surface.
Dip-slip fault
A fault in which the component of slip parallel to the fault dip exceeds that parallel to the fault strike.
Disconformity
Discordance
Disharmonic fold
A fold where the hinges and limbs do not match with those in adjacent layers..
Dislocations
A linear defect in the structure of a crystal where the atoms of the crystal structure are out of alignment.
Distortion
Change in shape
Domain
Drag fold
A fold adjacent to a fault in which layers are bent in the direction of movement of the opposite wall. Most 'drag' folds
probably form during fault propagation and not by 'drag' after the fault has formed.
Ductile
Duplex
A structure in which imbricate inclined thrust faults merge into flat faults both upward and downward.
Dyke
A minor intrusion where magma has filled a crack that is discordant to layers in the surrounding rocks. (Spelled
'Dike' in the U.S.A.)
Glossary | 191
Dynamic analysis
Structural methods that involve the determination of force, stress, strength, or energy involved in deformation.
Dynamic recrystallisation
Breakdown of original mineral grains and growth of new mineral grains as a result of extreme ductile deformation.
Earthquake
Rapid relative motion of parts of the solid Earth due to brittle failure on a fault.
Effective stress
Elastic
A stress-strain relationship in which stress and strain are proportional, and the strain is recoverable.
En echelon
An arrangement of linear or planar structures where each structure offset from adjacent structures in a consistent
sense that is oblique to the structures themselves. (Literally: as a squadron of cavalry.)
Endocontact
The region within an intrusion where it is affected by contact with the host rock.
Enveloping surface
A spherical projection in which angles are preserved. Also known as a sterographic projection. Great and small
circles project as circular arcs. Constructed using a Wulff net.
A spherical projection in which area is preserved.Great and small circles project as complex, non-circular arcs.
Constructed using a Schmidt net.
Exocontact
The region in the host rock (country rock) affected by contact with an intrusion.
Extension
Extension fracture
A fracture where rock masses on either side of a fracture have moved apart slightly, without significant movement
parallel to the fracture.
192 | Glossary
Extrapolation
Fabric
Any penetrative structure that gives a rock different properties in one direction relative to another.
Fabric element
Features within a rock that are aligned to give the rock a fabric.
Facing direction
Fault
A fracture showing significant displacement of one wall relative to the other, parallel to the fracture plane.
A fold produced by movement of a curved fault, in which movement of the fault caused bending of the hanging wall,
footwall, or both.
Fault cutoff
Intersection line between a fault plane and an older planar rock unit.
A fold that forms at the propagating tip of a fault, marking a region where there are rapid changes in both the dip
and the slip of the fault.
Fault regime
A tectonic environment in the Earth's upper crust characterized by the orientation of the principal stresses.
Fault scarp
A steep topographic slope marking a fault, where one wall of the fault forms higher ground than the other.
Fault tip
The linear boundary at the edge of a fault surface, separating faulted from unfaulted rock.
fault zone
A set of sub-parallel faults that may branch and joint along strike or down dip.
Glossary | 193
Fibrous vein fill
Mineral grains within a vein that are strongly elongated, typically tracking the direction of movement as the fracture
opened.
Finite deformation
The total deformation that a part of the Earth has undergone, between its original configuration and the present-
day state.
Finite strain
The total strain that a part of the Earth has undergone, between its original configuration and the present-day state.
Fissility
The property of splitting easily parallel to a plane, usually the result of sedimentary compaction.
Flame structure
A narrow, pointed soft-sediment deformation structure consisting of mud forced up into overlying sand.
Flat
In fault terminology, a region where a fault is parallel to layers in the wall rocks.
Flattening foliation
Floor thrust
Fluidise (Fluidize)
A process whereby previously stable sediment is behaves as a fluid when upward-flowing water passes through it
from below.
Flute
A sedimentary structure formed when a flute is filled by sand and preserved in relief on the base of a sandstone bed.
Fold axis
The orientation of a line that is everywhere parallel to a folded surface. The fold axis is the direction of the hinge,
crest, trough, and inflection lines.
Fold hinge
194 | Glossary
Fold interference pattern
A pattern formed by layers that have been folded twice during their deformation history.
A construction in which differently dipping surfaces are rotated about their line of intersection in order to represent
them on a plane sheet of paper.
Foliation
Planar fabric
Footwall
Foreland basin
A sedimentary basin that forms adjacent to an orogen, and which deepens toward the orogen, typically formed by
bending of the lithosphere in response to the weight of the growing orogen.
Formation
The primary unit of mapping in stratified rock; must be mappable, defined by lithological characteristics, have a
type section, and be named for a place or geographical feature.
Fracture
Fracture tip
The linear boundary at the edge of a fracture surface, separating fractured from unfractured rock.
Geologic map
A map showing the extent of, and boundaries between, different units of rock.
Geological boundary
A surface in 3D space, or a line on a 2D map, where one type of rock contacts another.
Glacial striae
Lineation on the Earth's surface formed by abrasion during flow of ice, which reveals the direction of ice movement.
Gneissic banding
Foliation characterised by layered domains of different composition, and the parallel preferred orientation of
minerals, typicall of high-grade metamorphic rocks.
Gouge
Glossary | 195
Graben
A block between two normal faults that dip towards each other. The rocks in a graben are offset downward relative
to the rocks on either side.
Graded bed
A bed, usually with a sharp base, in which grain-size becomes finer toward the top.
Gravity regime
A state of stress in which the maximum principal stress is vertical. Normal faults are common.
Great circle
A circular line that divides a sphere into two precisely equal parts.
Groove
A sedimentary structure formed when an object is dragged by a current across a sediment surface.
A sedimentary structure formed when a groove is filled by sand and preserved as a mold on the base a bed.
Group
Hackles
Feather-like striae radiating from a central point or line on a fracture. Part of plume structure.
Half-graben
A tilted block bounded by a normal fault on one side, along which the block is offset downward.
Hanging wall
Harmonic folds
Folds in which each layer is folded in step with the adjacent layers, so that hinge points can be matched between
layers
Heave
Heterogeneous strain
Strain that is not the same everywhere within a rock. Straight lines may become bent and parallel lines may becomeg
non-parallel.
196 | Glossary
Hinge
Hinterland
The region adjacent to a thrust belt away from which the thrust sheets appear to have moved.
Homogeneous strain
Strain that is the same everywhere within a rock. Straight lines remains straight, parallel lines remain parallel.
Horst
A block between two normal faults that dip away from each other. The rocks in a graben are offset upward relative
to the rocks on either side.
A ductile behaviour in which a material shows no deformation a certain stress (yield stress) is reached, and then
deforms rapidly so as to prevent the stress from rising futher.
Imbricate fan
A configuration of multiple listric faults that branch upward from a single flat.
Impact breccia
Inclination
Incremental strain
The strain that occurred during a small interval in the history of deformation.
Infinitesimal strain
The strain that was occurring a single instant during the history of deformation. (The limit of incremental
deformation as the time interval tends to zero.)
Inflection line
A line on a folded surface where the curvature is zero, typically marking a change from convex-up to convex-down,
or from antiform to synform.
Inflection surface
Inlier
A region on a geologuc map where older strata are surrounded by younger strata.
Glossary | 197
Interpolation
The process of estimating intermediate values between the points in a sparse set of data.
Intersection lineation
Invariant feature
Inverse grading
Grain-size variation within a bed in which coarser grains are concentrated at the top.
Isobar
A contour line separating higher pressures from lower; a line joining points of equal pressure.
Isopach
A contour line based on the thickness of a stratified rock unit, separating a thicker from a thiner part of a layer; a
line joining points of equal thickness.
Joint
Joint set
Joint system
Kinematics
The study of how parts of the Earth moved over geologic time. Include changes in position, orientation, size, and
shape that occurred between the formation of the rocks and their present day configuration.
Kink construction
A construction for folds in profile view, in which fold limbs are assumed to be perfectly planar, parallel surfaces, and
hinges are perfectly angular
Klippe
A region on a geologic map where the hanging wall of a fault is completely surrounded by footwall.
Lamina (laminae)
198 | Glossary
Layers
Lineation
Linear fabric; fabric defined by elements that are parallel to a line in space.
Liquidize, liquidise
A process whereby previously deposited sediment behaves as a liquid, when the sand grains become separated by
fluid
Listric
Lithosphere
The rigid outer part of the Earth that is divided into plates. Comprises the crust and the uppermost part of the
mantle.
Lithostatic stress
A state of stress in which all principal stresses are equal, due to the weight of overlying rock.
Lithostratigraphic unit
A soft-sediment deformation structure caracterized by rounded bulges, typically on the base of a sandstone bed.
LS tectonites
Rocks with a strong tectonic lineation that lies in the plane of a strong tectonic foliation.
Structures that are too big to see in one view. Must be mapped, or imaged from an aircraft or satellite.
Magnetic contour
A contour line based on characteristics of the Earth's magnetic field; a line that separates stronger magnetic fields
from weaker.
Magnetic declination
Structures that are too big to see in one view. Must be mapped, or imaged from an aircraft or satellite.
Glossary | 199
Mapping
The process of recording and interpreting data on a two-dimensional plan view such as a topographic base map.
Mean stress
Member
Structures visible in one view at the Earth's surface without optical assistance.
Metamorphic aureole
Baked zone around an intrusion that is often recognizable from changes in texture or mineralogy.
Microbreccia
Microscopic structure
Mineral lineation
Linear fabric defined by parallel alignment of acicular mineral grains; linear equivalent of slaty cleavage and
schistosity.
Mortar structure
Mudcracks
Thin fractures on the surface of beds that thin downward, form by shrinkage of mud as it dries.
Mylonite
Fine-grained rock formed through ductile shearing and dynamic recrystallisation in a shear zone.
Mylonitic lineation
Natural scale
The geometry of a cross-section when the vertical and horizontal scales are equal.
Necking
200 | Glossary
Negative flower structure
A zone of faults that steeped downwards and merge into a single fault or shear zone at depth, in which central
blocks are offset downwards; typical of transtensional and strike-slip faults.
Neotectonics
Non-coaxial deformation
Deformation in which the strain axes vary in orientation relative to the rock material over time.
Non-cylindrical fold
A fold in which there is no line that lies parallel to all parts of the surface, so there is no fold axis. Cross-sections
intersecting the fold at different points show contrasting geometries.
Non-penetrative fabric
A fabric that is not present everywhere in the rock, when observed at a given scale. Individual fabric planes or lines
can be counted and the spaces between them can be discerned.
Non-rigid deformation
Nonconformity
An unconformity formed by the contact between younger sedimentary strata deposited upon an eroded surface of
older crystalline rock.
Normal stress
The part of the stress (or traction) on a plane that acts perpendicular to the plane.
Oblate
The shape of an ellipsoid with one axis much shorter than the other two. Informally, a "pancake".
Oblique-slip fault
A fault that shows both significant dip slip and significant strike-slip.
Offset
Difference in the cutoff location of a surface on either side of a fault; an informal term for separation.
Onlap
The relationship of successively younger beds that extend farther geographically onto an unconformity surface,
generally produced by progressive burial of topography during transgression.
Glossary | 201
Orientation
The angles between a structure and a frame of reference (typically defined by the north and vertical directions)
Orogenic belt
Regions where the Earth's lithosphere has undergone shortening as a result of plate movements; usually
mountainous, or mountainous in the past.
Orthographic projection
A projection method in which structures are projected perpendicularly onto a sheet of paper, often accompanied
by folding line constructions.
Outcrop
Outcrop map
A map on which observations of exposed rock types and structures are recorded.
Structure visible in one view at the Earth's surface without optical assistance.
Outlier
A region on a geologic map where younger strata are completely surrounded by older strata.
Overstep
A relationship involving strata below an unconformity, that describes the way the younger succession rests on a
variety of units in the lower succession.
Paleogeologic map
A map of subcrop units below and unconformity; the geologic map that would be produced if all rocks above an
unconformity were stripped away.
Paraconformity
A disconformity where the only evidence for a time-gap is from detailed paleontological investigation.
Parallel fold
A fold in which the thickness of a layer (measured perpendicular to the layer boundaries) is constant.
Pascal
A transition or boundary between continental and oceanic lithosphere that does not coincide with a plate boundary.
202 | Glossary
Penetrative fabric
A fabric that is present everywhere in the rock, as far as can be observed at a given scale. Individual fabric planes or
lines cannot be counted.
Phyllitic foliation
Penetrative foliation intermediate between slaty cleavage and schistosity. There is no universal agreement on the
definition, but typically defined by mineral grains between 0.1 and 1 mm diameter.
Piercing point
Pillows
Pitch (rake)
Orientation of a line that lies in a plane, measured from the strike direction, within the plane.
Planar surface
A surface with constant orientation (strike and dip); contours are equally spaced, parallel, straight lines.
Plate tectonics
A theory describing the large-scale movements of the the lithosphere using simple mathematical and geometrical
methods to describe the movement of rigid plates.
Feather-like and concentric markings on joint surfaces produced during fracture propagation.
Plunge
Pole to plane
Porphyroblast
A large mineral grain in a metamorphic rock that has grown during metamorphism to be larger than the surrounding
material.
Porphyroclast
A large mineral grain in a metamorphic rock that is surrounded by finer-grained material produced by grain-size
reduction during deformation.
Glossary | 203
Positive flower structure
An array of downward-steepening faults with similar strike, in which central blocks are offset upwards relative to
the surrounding area, typical of transpressional and strike-slip faults.
Pressure
Pressure solution
Primary fabric
Primary structure
A geologic structure formed at the same time as the rock in whichit is found.
Primitive
Principal stresses
Three normal stresses acting along the poles to the principal planes of stress
The principle that most stratified rocks were deposited in layers approximately parallel to the Earth's surface.
Principle of Superposition
The principle that stratified rocks form with the oldest layers at the bottom, and youngest at the top.
Profile plane
A type of noncoaxial flow in which a single plane (the shear plane) undergoes no rotation, dilation, or distortion;
typical of shear zones.
prolate
The shape of an ellipsoid with one axis much longer than the other two. Informally, a "cigar".
204 | Glossary
Protolith
The original rock from which a metamorphic rock was formed by the action of heat, pressure, and deformation.
Pseudotachylite
Material melted by heating during fault movement. Is typically dark and very fine grained or glassy.
Pure shear
A special type of coaxial deformation in which there is no dilation and in which the intermediate strain axis stays
the same length.
pure strain
Coaxial deformation: deformation in which the rock material is not rotated relative to the strain axes.
Quadrants
A method of measuring bearings, popular in the United States, where angles are specified clockwise or
counterclockwise from N or S, towards either E or W. E.g. S37E
R'-shears
R-shears
Radial joint
Joint formed in outside an igneous intrusion. Orientation is approximately perpendicular to the boundary of the
intrusion.
Rake (pitch)
Orientation of a line that lies in a plane, measured from the strike direction, within the plane.
Ramp
In fault terminology, a region where a fault cuts across layers in the wall rocks.
Refolded folds
Folds that have been subject to a second folding event, producing a fold interference pattern.
Regression
Glossary | 205
Relay ramp
A region of distortion between the tips of two faults, where slip is transferred from one fault tip to another.
Releasing bend
Representative fraction
The scale of a map stated as a ratio of the length of a feature on the map to the length of the same feature in the
real world.
Restraining bend
An obsolete term for a rollover fold or fault bend fold formed in the hanging wall of a listric normal fault.
Ribs
Concentric ridges, approximately perpendicular to hackles on a joint surface. Part of plumose structure.
Small fractures that develop in response to stresses in fault walls during fault propagation and movement. Rieldel
shears are typically oriented at ~15 and ~75° to the main fault.
Right-hand rule
An orientation-measuring convention for planes. When facing the strike direction, the plane dips your right. (Or,
dip direction is 90° clockwise from the right-hand-rule strike direction.)
Rods
Rollover anticline
A fault bend fold formed in the hanging wall of a listric normal fault.
Roof thrust
Rotation
Rotational deformation
206 | Glossary
S-plane
Foliation in a shear zone, oriented oblique to the shear zone boundary, representing less deformed regions; from
the French word "schistosité".
S-tectonites
Scalar
Schistosity
Penetrative foliation defined by mineral grains coarser than ~1 mm. Coarser-grained version of slaty cleavage.
Secondary structure
Section balancing
Preparation of two consistent cross-sections showing the geometry before and after deformation. An important
part of checking cross-sections through thrust belts.
Separation
The distance between two fault cutoff lines, measured in a specified direction on a fault surface.
Sequence
Shatter cone
A conical joint surface diagnostic of impact structures, often decorated with plumose markings.
Shear fracture
A fracture where the two walls have slid past each other. (More or less synonomous with a fault, but typically used
for small-scale features of the Earth and of experimentally deformed rocks.)
Shear stress
The part of the stress (or traction) on a plane that acts parallel to the plane.
Shear zone
The ductile equivalent of a fault zone. A belt of ductile deformation across which movement has caused significant
offset between the two sides. Shear zones are typically formed at depths greater than brittle faults.
Sheath fold
A fold having a strongly curved hinge, so that the geometry resembles a finger of a glove. (Sometimes called condom
folds.)
Glossary | 207
Sigma porphyroclast
A structure formed by foliation that sweeps around a porphyroclast forming curved, rhombic shape, indicating the
sense of shear.
Sill
A tabular igneous intrusion where magma has intruded parallel to strata in the host rock.
Simple crater
A crater with with simple bowl shape and raised rims. Usually less than 5 km in diameter.
Simple shear
A type of non-coaxial deformation in which particles move along lines parallel to a single plane
Sinistral
Left-lateral movement: relative to an observer looking toward a fault or shear zone, the far side appears to have
moved left.
Slickenlines
Scratches (striae) or fibres on the fault surface. Indicate direction of net slip.
Slip
Slump structure
A soft sediment structure formed in sediments deposited on a slope that undergo catastrophic slope failure, and
move under the influence of gravity. Beds may be tightly folded, boudinaged, or both.
Small circle
lines on a stereonet that reach from east to west, like lines of latitude.
Sole markings
Sedimentary structures, such as flute and groove casts, preserved when coarse sediment is deposited rapidly on a
muddy substrate.
Stereogram
A stereographic projection of a geologic structure or structures. A powerful tool for solving geometric problems in
structural geology.
Stereonet
A grid of curves, the 3-D equivalent of a protractor. Used to measure angles on a stereographic projection.
208 | Glossary
stishovite
A high pressure tetragonal polymorph of quartz, in which silicon is in octahedral coordination, surrounded by six
oxygen atoms.
Strain
Strain axes
Three mutually perpendicular lines in a strain ellipsoid representing the maximum, minimum, and intermediate
stretches; also, the poles to three planes of zero shear strain.
Strain ellipse
Strain ellipsoid
Strain partitioning
Deformation in which strain is heterogeneous and different parts of the rock show different parts of the strain
history.
Strain rate
Strain ratio
The ratio between the long and short axis of the strain ellipse, a convenient measure of the amount of distortion in
two dimensions.
Stratified
Stratigraphy
Stress
Force concentration or force per unit area; also, the concentration of all the forces acting at a point within the Earth.
Stress axes
The directions of the principal stresses; also, the directions of the poles to the principal planes of stress.
Stress ellipse
The envelope in a plane of all the stresses (tractions) acting at a point. Also, the ellipse having the principal stresses
as its axes.
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Stress ellipse (2-D) or Stress ellipsoid (3-D)
The envelope in 3D of all stresses (tractions) acting at a point. Also, the ellipsoid having the principal stresses as its
axes.
Stretch
A measure of longitudinal strain equal to the deformed length divided by the original length.
Stretching lineation
Strike
Strike separation
The distance along a fault, measured in the direction of fault strike, between two cutoff lines of the same severed
surface.
Strike-slip fault
A fault in which the component of slip parallel to the fault strike exceeds that parallel to the fault dip.
Structural geology
The study of structures within the Earth and their origin; in practice, structural geology mainly focusses on
secondary structures and the deformation processes that formed them.
Structure contour
A contour based on the elevation of a geological surface, separating higher and lower parts of the surface; a line
joining points of equal elevation on a geological surface.
Subcrop
A feature on an unconformity surface formed where the unconformity cuts off (intersects) a older rock unit or
surface.
Subcrop limit
A line on an angular unconformity surface making the boundary of an older unit that was partially removed by
erosion at the unconformity surface.
Subsurface
Suevite
A fine-grained rock with a breccia texture, consisting of a mixture of rock fragments, glass, and melt, produced
during impacts of extra-terrestrial objects.
210 | Glossary
Surface trace
The line along which a geological surface intersects the topographic surface.
Syncline
A fold where the younging direction is towards the centre of the fold.
Synform
A fold where the limbs dip towards the hinge and the fold closes downward.
Syntaxial vein
A vein where repeated cracking has occurred in the centre of the vein and mineral fibres are typically in
crystallographic continuity with the grains in the wall rock.
Fractures that form at 15° to a fault, with the same sense of displacement as the fault.
Platy or flake-shaped mineral grains (e.g. mica) that are often aligned to produce a fabric.
Tectonic wedge
Tectonics
The mathematical study of structures; commonly applied to large-scale movements of the lithosphere and the
structures that these have produced (plate tectonics).
Tensor
A physical quantity that varies in magnitude with orientation, and can be represented by an ellipse or ellipsoid, or
by a square matrix of numbers. (Strictly speaking this definition describes a 2nd-order tensor; 1st-order tensors are
here referred to as vectors.)
Threading contours
Throw
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Thrust regime
A stress regime in which the minimum principal stress is vertical. Reverse faults are common.
Tip line
The linear boundary at the edge of a fracture surface, separating fractured from unfractured rock.
Topographic contours
Contours that show the elevation and shape of the land surface. Contours that separate points of higher and lower
elevation.
Topographic surface
Trace
The line formed by the intersection of a geologic surface with the topographic surface or a cross-section.
Traction
Transform fault
Transgression
Translation
Change in position
Transpression
Transtension
Trend
Trough point
Trough surface
212 | Glossary
Unconformity
An ancient surface of erosion and/or non-deposition that indicates a gap in the stratigraphic record.
Variant feature
vector
A physical quantity that has magnitude and direction, and can be represented by an arrow.
Vein
Vergence
The direction in which rocks near the surface have moved relative to rocks deeper down.
Vertical exaggeration
Describes the distortion of a cross-section in which the vertical and horizontal scales are not equal. The vertical
exaggeration is the ratio between the length of the representation of a vertical unit line and the representation of a
horizontal unit line.
Viscous (Newtonian)
Wrench regime
A state of stress in which the intermediate principal stress is vertical. Strike-slip faults are common.
Xenolith
Zenith
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