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Jump to first page Geologic Time Chapter 34. Jump to first page Dating rocks n Relative dating F Compare events and put them in order based on their sequence.

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Presentation on theme: "Jump to first page Geologic Time Chapter 34. Jump to first page Dating rocks n Relative dating F Compare events and put them in order based on their sequence."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jump to first page Geologic Time Chapter 34

2 Jump to first page Dating rocks n Relative dating F Compare events and put them in order based on their sequence of formation, oldest to youngest. n Absolute dating F Using radioactive decay to determine the exact age of rocks

3 Jump to first page The Geologic Time Scale p. 182 Cenozoic Mesozoic Paleozoic Precambrian Phanerozoic

4 Jump to first page Geologic Time Scale n Geologists have divided the earth’s history into various eras, periods and epochs using fossil evidence (which life forms lived when) n The chart has been updated many times as more fossil evidence is located

5 Jump to first page Principles of relative dating Principles of relative dating n Law of superposition F In an undisturbed sequence of sedimentary rocks the oldest rocks are on the bottom, youngest on top

6 Jump to first page Law of superposition

7 Jump to first page Principles of relative dating Principles of relative dating n Principle of original horizontality F Layers of sediment are generally deposited in a horizontal, flat-lying position F Rock layers that are flat have not been disturbed

8 Jump to first page Principles of relative dating Principles of relative dating n Principle of cross-cutting relationships F Younger features cut across older feature F A fault or dike that cuts across sedimentary layers is younger than the layers. Igneous dikes cutting across metamorphic rock

9 Jump to first page Principles of relative dating n Included Fragments F An inclusion is a piece of rock that is enclosed within another rock (2 examples: xenolith and pebble in conglomerate) F Rock containing the inclusion is younger, the inclusion is older

10 Jump to first page Principles of relative dating n Unconformity F An unconformity is a break in the rock record produced by erosion and/or nondeposition of rock layers

11 Jump to first page Sketch of an unconformity:

12 Jump to first page Geological events of an unconformity: 1. Sedimentation / deposition and lithification 2. Deformation / folding and erosion 3. Subsidence, water is covering 4. More sedimentation happened once covered with water

13 Jump to first page Unconformity in rocks: Angular unconformity at Siccar Point, Scotland


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