Chapter 9 Geological Structures

Figure 9.0.1  Image highlighting the Dutchman Draw Fault and folded rocks of the Shnabkaib Member of Moenkopi Formation. Arizona/Utah border.  Mike Conway, AZGS, 2021

Observing and understanding geological structures helps us to determine the kinds of stresses that have existed within Earth’s crust in the past.  This type of information is critical to our understanding of plate tectonics, earthquakes, the formation of mountains, metamorphism, and Earth resources.  Some of the types of geological structures that are important to study include bedding planes, planes of foliation, dykes and sills, fractures, faults, and folds.  Structural geologists make careful observations of the orientations of these structures and the amount and direction of offset along faults.

Learning Objectives

After carefully reading this chapter, completing the exercises within it, and answering the questions at the end, you should be able to:

  • Describe the types of stresses that exist within the Earth’s crust.
  • Explain how rocks respond to those stresses by brittle, elastic, or plastic deformation, or by fracturing.
  • Summarize how rocks become folded and know the terms used to describe the features of folds.
  • Describe the conditions under which rocks fracture.
  • Summarize the different types of faults, including normal, reverse, thrust, and strike-slip.
  • Measure the strike and dip of a geological feature.
  • Plot strike and dip information on a map.

 


***See 9.5  for Text and Media Attributions

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Physical Geology: An Arizona Perspective Copyright © 2022 by Merry Wilson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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