not found 16275 مالک اشتراک گذاری ارسال شده در 16 مهر، ۱۳۹۱ Tableland: A large elevated region with a relatively low relief surface Tar sand: A sandstone containing the densest asphaltic components of petroleum - the end-product of evaporation of volatile components or of some thickening process Talus: A deposit of large angular fragments of physically weathered bedrock, usually at the base of a cliff or steep slope Tectonics: The study of the movements and deformation of the crust on a large scale, including epeirogeny, metamorphism, folding, faulting, and plate tectonics Terminal moraine: A sinuous ridge of unsorted glacial till deposited by a glacier at the line of its farthest advance Terrestrial planet: A planet similar in size and composition to the Earth; especially Mars, Earth, Venus, and Mercury Terrestrial sediment: A deposit of sediment that accumulated above sea level in lakes, alluvial fans, floodplains, moraines, etc., regardless of its present elevation Texture (rock): The rock characteristics of grain or crystal size, size variability, rounding or angularity, and preferred orientation Thalweg: A sinuous imaginary line following the deepest part of a stream Thermal conductivity: A measure of a rock's capacity for heat conduction Thermal expansion: The property of increasing in volume as a result of an increase in internal temperature Thermonuclear reaction: A reaction in which atomic nuclei fuse into new elements with a large release of heat; especially a reaction that is self-sustaining. Occasionally used to include fission reactions as well Thermoremnent magnetization: A permanent magnetization acquired by igneous rocks in the presence of the Earth's magnetic field as they cool through the Curie point Thrust fault: A dip-slip fault in which the upper block above the fault plane moves up and over the lower block, so that older strata are placed over younger Tidal current: A horizontal displacement of ocean water under the gravitational influence of Sun and Moon, causing the water to pile up against the coast at high tide and move outward at low tide Tidal flat: A broad, flat region of muddy or sandy sediment, covered and uncovered in each tidal cycle Till: An unconsolidated sediment containing all sizes of fragments from clay to boulders deposited by glacial action, usually unbedded Time scale: The division of geologic history into eras, periods, and epochs accomplished through stratigraphy and paleontology Topographic map: See Contour map; also a schematic drawing of prominent landforms indicated by conventionalized symbols, such as hachures or contours Topography: The shape of the Earth's surface, above and below sea level; the set of landforms in a region; the distribution of elevations Topset bed: A horizontal sedimentary bed formed at the top of a delta and overlying the foreset beds Trace element: An element that appears in minerals in a concentration of less than l percent (often less than 0.001 percent Transform fault: A strike-slip fault connecting the ends of an offset in a mid-ocean ridge. Some pairs of plates slide past each other along transform faults Transgression: A rise in sea level relative to the land which causes areas to be submerged and marine deposition to begin in that region Transition element: Elements of atomic number 21 to 29, 38 to 46, and 71 to 78, whose second outermost electron shell is only partially filled Transpiration: The removal of water from the ground into plants, ultimately to be evaporated into the atmosphere by them Transverse dune: A dune that has its axis transverse to the prevailing winds or to a current. The upwind or upcurrent side has a gentle slope, and the downwind side lies at the angle of repose Trap (oil): A sedimentary or tectonic structure that impedes the upward movement of oil and gas and allows it to collect beneath the barrier Travel-time curve: A curve on a graph of travel time versus distance for the arrival of seismic waves from distant events. Each type of seismic wave has its own curve Travertine: A terrestrial deposit of limestone formed in caves and around hot springs where cooling, carbonate-saturated groundwater is exposed to the air Trellis drainage: A system of streams in which tributaries tend to lie in parallel valleys formed in steeply dipping beds in folded belts Trench: A long and narrow deep trough in the sea floor; interpreted as marking the line along which a plate bends down into a subduction zone Triple junction: A point that is common to three plates and which must also be the meeting place of three boundary features, such as divergence zones, convergence zones, or transform faults Tsunami: A large destructive wave caused by sea-floor movements in an earthquake Tuff: A consolidated rock composed of pyroclastic fragments and fine ash. If particles are melted slightly together from their own heat, it is a "welded tuff." Turbidite: The sedimentary deposit of a turbidity current, typically showing graded bedding and sedimentary structures on the undersides of the sandstones. Turbidity current: A mass of mixed water and sediment that flows downhill along the bottom of an ocean or lake because it is denser than the surrounding water. It may reach high speeds and erode rapidly (see also Density current) Turbulent flow: A high-velocity flow in which streamlines are neither parallel nor straight but curled into small tight eddies (compare Laminar flow) 3 لینک به دیدگاه
not found 16275 مالک اشتراک گذاری ارسال شده در 16 مهر، ۱۳۹۱ Ultramafic rock: An igneous rock consisting dominantly of mafic minerals, containing less than 10 percent feldspar. Includes dunite, peridotite, amphibolite, and pyroxenite Unconformity: A surface that separates two strata. It represents an interval of time in which deposition stopped, erosion removed some sediments and rock, and then deposition resumed (see also Angular unconformity ) Unconsolidated material: Nonlithified sediment that has no mineral cement or matrix binding its grains Uniformitarianism, Principle of: The concept that the processes that have shaped the Earth through geologic time are the same as those observable today Unit cell: The smallest contiguous group of atomic structural units in a mineral that can be repeated in three directions to form a crystal Uplift: A broad and gentle epeirogenic increase in the elevation of a region without a eustatic change of sea level Upwelling current: The upward movement of cold bottom water in the sea, which occurs when wind or currents displace the lighter surface water U-shaped valley: A deep valley with steep upper walls that grade into a flat floor, usually eroded by a glacier 3 لینک به دیدگاه
not found 16275 مالک اشتراک گذاری ارسال شده در 16 مهر، ۱۳۹۱ Vadose zone: The region in the ground between the surface and the water table in which pores are not filled with water. Also called the unsaturated zone Valence electron: An electron of the outermost shell of an atom; one of those most active in bonding Valley glacier: A glacier that is smaller than a continental glacier or an icecap, and which flows mainly along well-defined valleys, many with tributaries Van der Waals bond: A bond much weaker than the ionic or covalent, which bonds atoms by small electrostatic attraction Varve: A thin layer of sediment grading upward from coarse to fine and light to dark, found in a lake bed and representing one year's deposition of glacial outwash Vector: A mathematical element that has a direction and magnitude, but no fixed position. Examples are force and gravity Vein: A deposit of foreign minerals within a rock fracture or joint Ventifact: A rock that exhibits the effects of sand-blasting or "snowblasting" on its surfaces, which become fiat with sharp edges in between Vertical exaggeration: The ratio of the horizontal scale (for example, 100,000: 1) to the vertical scale (for example, 500: 1) in an illustration Vesicle: A cavity in an igneous rock that was formerly occupied by a bubble of escaping gas Viscosity: A measure of resistance to flow in a liquid Volcanic ash: A volcanic sediment of rock fragments, usually glass, less than 4 millimeters in diameter that is formed when escaping gases force out a fine spray of magma Volcanic ash fall: A deposit of volcanic ash resting where it was dropped by eruptions and winds Volcanic ash flow : A mixture of vol canic ash and gases that moves downhill as a density current in the atmosphere Volcanic block: A pyroclastic rock fragment ranging from about fist- to car-sized Volcanic bomb: A pyroclastic rock fragment that shows the effects of cooling in flight in its streamlined or "bread-crust" surface Volcanic breccia: A pyroclastic rock in which all fragments are more than 2 millimeters in diameter Volcanic cone: The deposit of lava and pyroclastic materials that has settled close to the volcano's central vent Volcanic dome: A rounded accumulation around a volcanic vent of congealed lava too viscous to flow away quickly; hence usually rhyolite lava. Volcanic dust: See Volcanic ash Volcanic ejecta blanket: A collective term for all the pyroclastic rocks deposited around a volcano, especially by a volcanic explosion Volcanic emanations: Gases, especially steam, emitted from a vent or released from lava Volcanic pipe: The vertical chamber along which magma and gas ascend to the surface; also, a formation of igneous rock that cooled in a pipe and remains after the erosion of the volcano Volcano: Any opening through the crust that has allowed magma to reach the surface, including the deposits immediately surrounding this vent V-shaped valley: A valley whose walls have a more-or-less uniform slope from top to bottom, usually formed by stream erosion 3 لینک به دیدگاه
not found 16275 مالک اشتراک گذاری ارسال شده در 16 مهر، ۱۳۹۱ Wadi: A steep-sided valley containing an intermittent stream in an arid region Warping: In tectonics, refers to the gentle, regional bending of the crust, which occurs in epeirogenic movements Water mass: A mass of water that fills part of an ocean or lake and is distinguished by its uniform physical and chemical properties, such as temperature and salinity Water table: A gently-curved surface below the ground at which the vadose zone ends and the phreatic zone begins; the level to which a well would fill with water Wave-cut terrace: A level surface formed by wave erosion of coastal bedrock to the bottom of the turbulent breaker zone. May appear above sea level if uplifted Wavelength: The distance between two successive peaks, or between troughs, of a cyclic propagating disturbance Wave steepness: The maximum height or amplitude of a wave divided by its wavelength Weathering: The set of all processes that decay and break up bedrock, by a combination of physically fracturing or chemical decomposition 3 لینک به دیدگاه
not found 16275 مالک اشتراک گذاری ارسال شده در 16 مهر، ۱۳۹۱ Xenolith: A piece of country rock found engulfed in an intrusion X-ray diffraction: In mineralogy, the process of identifying mineral structures by exposing crystals to X-rays and studying the resulting diffraction pattern 3 لینک به دیدگاه
not found 16275 مالک اشتراک گذاری ارسال شده در 16 مهر، ۱۳۹۱ Youth (geomorphology): A stage in the geomorphic cycle in which a landscape has just been uplifted and is beginning to be dissected by canyons cut by young streams 3 لینک به دیدگاه
not found 16275 مالک اشتراک گذاری ارسال شده در 16 مهر، ۱۳۹۱ Zeolite: A class of silicates containing H=O in cavities within the crystal structure. Formed by alteration at low temperature and pressure of other silicates, often volcanic glass Zoned crystal: A single crystal of one mineral that has a different chemical composition in its inner and outer parts. Formed from minerals belonging to a solid-solution series, and caused by the changing concentration of elements in a cooling magma that results from crystals settling out 3 لینک به دیدگاه
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