Geological Glossary |

| gabbro A dark, coarse-grained intrusive igneous rock. Gabbro is made of calcium-rich plagioclase, with amphibole and/or pyroxene, and is chemically equivalent to basalt.
Family of silicate minerals containing varying amounts of aluminum, iron, magnesium, and calcium. Schist and gneiss often have tiny, glassy red garnet dodecahedrons.
A branch of geology that focuses on the chemical composition of Earth materials.
Power generation using natural steam derived from the Earth’s internal heat. geomorphology A branch of geology and geography that studies the development of landforms.
A long-lived sheet or mass of ice made of recrystallized snow. Glaciers
move downhill due to the stress of their own weight.
A coarse-grained, foliated metamorphic rock that commonly has alternating
bands of light and dark-colored minerals. A continent formed in the Southern Hemisphere during the Late Paleozoic.
It included most of South America, Africa, India, Austrailia, and
Antarctica.
An elongate block of rock down-dropped along roughly parallel faults. graded bed A sediment layer with a gradation of grain size from large grains to finer grains. grain size Refers to the size of individual mineral crystals or particles within a rock or sediment deposit.
A coarse-grained intrusive igneous rock with at least 65% silica.
Quartz, plagioclase feldspar and potassium feldspar make up most of
the rock and give it a fairly light color. Granite has more potassium
feldspar than plagioclase feldspar. Usually with biotite, but also
may have hornblende.
A general term for intrusive igneous rocks that look similar to granite
but may range in composition from quartz-diorite to granite. All granitic
rocks are light colored; feldspar and quartz are visible in hand specimen.
An intrusive igneous rock similar to granite, but contains more plagioclase
than potassium feldspar.
All sedimentary particles larger than two millimeters is called gravel.
Gravel is subdivided into pebbles, cobbles, and boulders.
A metamorphic rock derived from basalt or chemically equivalent rock such as gabbro. Greenstones contain sodium-rich plagioclase feldspar, chlorite, and epidote, as well as quartz. The chlorite and epidote make greenstones green.
Water found beneath the Earth’s surface where all empty space in the rock is completely filled with water.
Coarse sand and gravel that forms from weathering of granitic rocks
A very small channel formed by running water. Gullies hold water for brief periods of time after a rain storm or snow melt. |