Striation (geology)

In geology, a striation is a groove, created by a geological process, on the surface of a rock or a mineral.

Striations (slickenfibres) on a fault surface near Kilve, England
Glacial striations in Canada
Striations on pyrite crystals

In structural geology, striations are linear furrows, or linear marks, generated from fault movement. The striation's direction reveals the movement direction in the fault plane.

Similar striations, called glacial striations, can occur in areas subjected to glaciation. Striations can also be caused by underwater landslides.

Striations can also be a growth pattern or mineral habit that looks like a set of hairline grooves, seen on crystal faces of certain minerals. Examples of minerals that can show growth striations include pyrite, feldspar, quartz, tourmaline, chalcocite and sphalerite.

Glacial Striations

The surface of rocks can have an altered appearance as a result of the movement of ice. They can show a polished looking surface scarred with glacial striations. Often these striations carved into the bedrock extend for long distances. The scars are a result of hard rocks that were stuck as fragments in the glaciers, being forced into the surface of the bedrock with great pressure along with gradual movement. The bedrock that we can observe these marks in today must be a hard rock able to be able to preserve these features, which could have formed up to 30,000 years ago. Consequently, rocks that are softer don't preserve the polished appearance or the striation features nearly as well. However, other features can be presented on hard rocks like striations, but are formed differently. A formation known as a slickenside also shows smooth, polished looking surfaces with scars in uniform lines. Contrary to glacial striations, slickensides are a result of movement along a fault line which erodes the bedrock without the presence of ice.

gollark: Can't see anything obvious about Qt there.
gollark: I should probably ask on r/archlinux or something.
gollark: I would suspect it being a distro thing, but I have multiMC installed from the AUR and recompiling it didn't help.
gollark: ```osmarks@fenrir ~/Downloads [SIGSEGV]> calibre-debug -gcalibre 4.13 embedded-python: False is64bit: TrueLinux-5.5.13-arch2-1-x86_64-with-glibc2.2.5 Linux ('64bit', 'ELF')('Linux', '5.5.13-arch2-1', '#1 SMP PREEMPT Mon, 30 Mar 2020 20:42:41 +0000')Python 2.7.17Linux: ('', '', '')Interface language: NoneSuccessfully initialized third party plugins: Gather KFX-ZIP (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && DeDRM (6, 6, 3) && Package KFX (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && KFX metadata reader (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && KFX Input (1, 29, 0)Turning on automatic hidpi scalingdevicePixelRatio: 1.0logicalDpi: 96.1119113573 x 96.0945812808physicalDpi: 112.286084142 x 112.758381503Using calibre Qt style: Truefish: “calibre-debug -g” terminated by signal SIGSEGV (Address boundary error)```with calibre.
gollark: I checked, I have more but they all break.

See also

Bibliography

  • McCalla, Carole (September 3, 2008). "Glad You Asked: Glacial Striations and Slickensides – Utah Geological Survey". Utah Geological Survey. Retrieved 2020-04-06.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.