1 Earth System

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© By Dr. Muhammad Edisar, MT 1 FI-6121 System Fisis Bumi Lecturer: Dr.M.Edisar, MT The Composition of the Earth

Transcript of 1 Earth System

  • By Dr. Muhammad Edisar, MT 1

    FI-6121 System Fisis Bumi Lecturer: Dr.M.Edisar, MT

    The Composition of the Earth

  • By Dr. Muhammad Edisar, MT 2

    (Adapted from, Beatty, 1990.)

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    W.J. Kious and R.I. Tilling, This Dynamic Earth: The

    Story of Plate Tectonics, U.S. Geological Survey, 1996.

    By Dr. Muhammad Edisar, MT

  • 4Komposisi Bumi Bedasarkan:

    Komposisi Kimia

    Unsur-unsur utama

    Sifat Fisis

    By Dr. Muhammad Edisar, MT

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    Komposisi Kimia Inti Bumi

    Zona Pusat Bumi

    Mulai pada kedalaman ~ 2,900 km

    Disususun dari Fe-alloys

    Inti bagian luar

    Cair

    Fe, Ni, S

    Inti bagian luar

    Padat (akibat tekanan yang sangat besar)

    Fe

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    Batas Inti mantle (CMB) didefinisikan oleh diskontinuitas Gutenberg

    Zone dari 200 - 300 km, ditandai D11

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    Mantle

    Daerah sekitar inti

    ~ 83 % dari volume Bumi

    < kerapatannya dari inti

    Seluruh mantle disusun dari dua silikat Fe dan Mg

    Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4 Pyroxene (Mg, Fe)SiO3

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    Mineral ini berubah bentuknya pada tekanan yang berbeda.

    Akibatnya ada batas dalam mantle yang menggambarkan perubahan fasa, atau ikatan atom dari mineral tersebut.

    Dua perubahan fase yang paling penting terjadi pada kedalaman 410-km, dan 660-km.

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    Pada mantle bagian atas (diatas 660-km) olivine and pyroxene ditemukan sebagau peridotite

    Pada mantle bagian bawah (dibawah 660-km) olivine and pyroxene berbentuk perovskites dan jauh lebih sedikit jumlahnya dari oxide, magnesiowstite

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    Batas 660-km adalah penting untuk beberapa alasan:

    Menggambarkan gempa bumi paling dalam

    Perubahan fase mineral pada kedalam ini dapat di buat di laboratorium, temperature pada kealaman harus ~ 1700C

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    Kerak (Crust)

    Batas Mantle Kerak dibangun oleh diskontinuitas Mohorovii

    Daerah ketebalannya dari 10 - 70 km

    Terdiri dari dua jenis

    1. Samudra

    2. Benua

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    Kerak Samudra Kerak tipis dibawah lautan

    Basalt

    Ketebalan rata-rata sekitar 8 km ~ 2-km Basalt bantal

    ~ 6-km Gabbro

    Densitasnya 3.2 g/cm3

    Kompoisisi kaya akan Ca, Mg, Fe

    < 50 % SiO2

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    Kerak Benua

    Ketebalannya dari 30 - 70 km Paling tipis dimana lempeng benua

    bergerak menjauh dan terpisah

    Paling tebal ada dibawah pegunungan

    Densitasnya rata-rata 2.7 g/cm3

    Granit

    Komposisinya kaya akan Si, Al, Na, K

    > 50% SiO2

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    Sifat Fisis

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    lithosphere

    Kulit bagian luar dari Bumi yang Kaku (rigid)

    Disusun dari :

    Mantel Bagian Atas

    Kerak Samudra

    Kerak Benua

    Ketebalannya 70 - 125 km

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    asthenosphere

    Daerah kulit bagian luar Bumi yang terletak dibawah lithosphere

    Meluas sampai kedalaman ~ 220-km

    Bersifat plastis

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    Teori Tektonik Lempeng

    Sintesa Modern

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    Permukaan Bumi terbagi ke pada 12 plat utama

    Plate bergerak secara horizontalterhadap satu sama lain

    Plate mengapung ataumeluncur diatas lapisan asthenosphere viskositas tinggi.

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    Lempeng terdiri dari kerak samudra dan kerak benua

    Aksi utama tektonik lempeng terjadi pada pinggiran lempeng

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    Dalam skala waktu manusia batas-batas ini ditandai dengan adanya gunung api dan kejadian-kejadian gempabumi.

    Diatas studi waktu geologi tas-batas btersebut adalah tempat-tempat terjadinya splitting, shifting dan crumpling dari benua

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    Volcanoes of the World (Smithsonian Institution Global Volcanism Program)

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    Jenis-jenis pergerakan lempeng

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    Lempeng Divergent

    Batas penyebaran (Spreading)

    Daerah healed kerak atau fissures

    Contoh :

    Rift Valley dari Afrika bagian timur

    Mid-Atlantic ridge

    Gunung api, gempabumi

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    Heezen and Tharp

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    Lempeng Convergent

    Pada batas lempeng convergent respons terhadap tumbukan lempeng akan bervariasi dengan jenis kerak yang bersangkutan

    Ada tiga kemungkinan kombinasi:

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    Kerak samudra converging with kerak samudra:

    Subduksi satu lempeng

    Formasi dari sebuah busur kepulauan

    Gunung api

    Gempabumi

    Contoh kepulauan Japanese

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    Kerak samudra converging degan kerak benua :

    Formasi dari rantai pegunungan

    Gunung api

    Gempa bumi

    Contoh Pegunungan Andes

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    Kerak benua converging dengan kerak benua :

    Overriding dari satu lempeng

    Formasi dari daerah pegunungan

    Gempa bumi

    Contoh Himalayas

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    Transform Boundaries

    side-slip boundary

    create fault zones

    earthquakes

    example San Andreas

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    Cross section by Jos F. Vigil from This

    Dynamic Planet

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    50 million years

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    150 million years

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    250 million years

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    Ecosphere

    That part of the earth consisting of the atmosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, and biosphere

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    Atmosphere

    The gaseous layer which surrounds the earth, and which is held by gravitational attraction. It consists of layers, the bottom ones of which are: Thermosphere > 80 km

    Mesopause

    Mesosphere 45 - 80 km

    Stratopause

    Stratosphere 12 - 45 km

    Tropopause

    Troposphere 0 -12 km

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    Hydrosphere

    Earth's water, in any physical state

    Gaseous

    Liquid

    Solid

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    Lithosphere

    The outermost part of the solid earth, consisting of the entire crust and the upper mantle, from the surface to a depth of about 70 kilometers (km)

    It is stronger and mechanically more rigid than the asthenosphere (70 - 250 km), which lies under it

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    Interior of the Earth

    Crust Continental (0-40 km, to a maximum of 100km)

    Oceanic (0-10 km)

    Mantle Upper (bottom of crust to 700 km, and includes

    the transition zone (350 to 700 km)

    Lower (700 - 2900 km)

    Core Outer (2900 - 4980 km - liquid iron-nickel)

    Inner (4980 - 6370 km - solid)

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    Biosphere

    Interface layer between earth's crust, atmosphere, and hydrosphere where life is found

    Includes the total ecosystem of the earth

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    Ecosystem

    Community of interacting organisms, of all species

    Includes interactions of this community with the chemical and physical systems of earth

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    Human Activities

    Interact with the natural world, causing changes in the ecosystem

    Changes vary in magnitude and temporal scale

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    Environmental Issues

    Changes in the ecosphere caused by:

    Natural processes

    Human activities

    Often cause change

    Affect the rate at which change occurs

    Or both

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    Changes By Other Species

    Humans are not the only species to cause environmental change

    Cyanobacteria, the first organisms capable of photosynthesis, gradually changed the atmosphere of earth from one without oxygen to one with the present 21% oxygen content

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    So What Makes Humans Different?

    Humans are the first species to be aware of their influence

    Humans assume, to some extent, responsibility for wise management of the planet

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    Technology Improvements

    During the last fifty years

    Have greatly contributed to our awareness of environmental change

    Especially contributing to our knowledge of global scale processes

    Greatly enhanced out knowledge of the temporal scale of global change

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    Examples of Technological Change

    Satellite observations

    Computational power

    Rapid communication (Internet)

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    Changes to the Ecosphere

    Many examples of modification of ecospheric components have been described

    Representative examples of these modifications are shown on the following slides

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    Atmospheric Modifications

    Depletion of ozone (O3) in the ozone layer (stratosphere) which affects UV light absorption Ozone hole

    Leads to increased rates of skin cancer

    Acid deposition introduction of pollutant gasses into the atmosphere leads to the formation of acid rain

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    Atmospheric Modifications cont.

    Modification of the climate system by the introduction of greenhouse gases Major gases are carbon dioxide, freons, methane

    Will lead to a warmer earth, and probably increase number and severity of major storms

    May affect short and medium term climate, and may modify the areas in which food can be grown

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    Hydrological Modifications

    Diagram shows a local example of the hydrological cycle

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    Hydrological Cycle Modifications

    Withdrawal of water

    Pollution of water

    Impoundment of water (dams)

    Modifications in erosion and depositional rates

    Silting of rivers and estuaries

    Increased erosion below dams

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    Biosphere Modifications

    Mobilization and redistribution of chemical elements

    Most important carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and oxygen (O)

    Results in enrichment and depletion of various parts of the system, leading to problems like red tide, depletion of soil productivty, etc.

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    Biosphere Modifications cont.

    Human activities change natural environment Often results in changes if species distribution,

    especially in loss of biological diversity (biodiversity)

    Rapid expansion of urban and suburban areas decreases available habitat

    Deforestation

    Expansion of farming into marginal environments

    Land use that is insensitive to long term changes Salinization

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    Results of Environmental Change

    Species reduction

    Mass mortality - a large number of individuals die, which may lead to a new equilibrium distribution, with a smaller number of individuals of the species in question, or the original equilibrium may be approximately restored, to precatastrophe levels

    Extinction - A complete elimination of a species. Extinction can and does occur naturally - Man's activities have increased the rate of extinction

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    Natural Events

    Natural events often lead to mass mortality in many species - extinction may occur in severely geographically restricted species

    Examples:

    Earthquakes

    Volcanoes

    Hurricanes

    Small meteorite impacts

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    Overview

    Geologic Time

    Movements of the Continents

    Earth Materials

    Tectonic Forces

    Weathering and Erosion Processes

    Erosional Agents and Deposition

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    Geologic TimePretend the age of the earth (4.6+ billion years) is compressed

    into one calendar year.

    January 1 - Earth and planets formed

    Early March - liquid water stands in pools.

    Late March - earliest life

    July - oxygen is important part of atmosphere

    October 25 - multicellular organisms

    Late November - plants and animals abundant

    December 15 to 25 - dinosaurs arise and disappear

    11:20 pm, December 31 - Humans appear

    One second before midnight - Automobile invented

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    Formation of the Earths Interior

    @5 bya, plantesimals (meterorites,icy comets) collide heat released

    (Kinetic energy to thermal energy)

    Entire planet melts (still cooling today)

    Gravity sorts materials by density

    Fe in center

    Si and O compounds towards surface

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    The Upper Mantle and Crust

    Crust (5 mi for ocean, 25 mi for continents)

    Dense iron-rich basalts (mafic) make up ocean floor Fe, Silica, magnesium

    Silica- rich rock makes up the continents (felsic) Silica, aluminum

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    General trends: temperature, density

    Horizon composition, behavior

    The Earths Interior

    Distance: 6730 km (3963 miles)

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    What is tectonics? From Greek tektonikus

    meaning building or construction

    Plate tectonics refers to the process of plate formation, movement, and destruction.

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    What is a Plate?

    Lithospheric plate: crust + upper mantle

    Aesthenosphere: plastic mantle

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    History of Plate Tectonics

    Fit of coastlines recognized early

    Sir Francis Bacon (1600s)

    No mechanism for motion

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    1915 Alfred Wegener proposes theory of continental drift.

    Supercontinent Pangaea (all-earth) [225mya].

    Fragmentation and drift to current positions.

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    Plate Movement History

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    Wegners evidence

    Fit of continents

    Fossil plants, animals, rock types / geology

    match on opposite shores

    deposits inconsistent with current geography

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    Striking Match of Biological Regions

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    Striking Match of Geologic Regions

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    History of Plate Tectonics Problem with continental drift?

    No sound mechanism for the drift!

    Wegner hypothesizes spin of earth or tides..

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    History of Plate Tectonics New theory for motion: Arthur Holmes

    (1930s)

    thermal convective cells in the upper mantle (aesthenosphere)

    theory is largely ignored

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    History of Plate Tectonics

    In the 1960s, Harry Hess and Robert Deitz (geophysicists) propose sea floor spreadingalong mid-oceanic ridges for plate motion.

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    Sea Floor Spreading

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    Plate Tectonics Theory Continental Drift + Sea Floor Spreading

    + new data Theory of Plate Tectonics

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    Plate Tectonics Theory

    Plate boundaries: main location for Earths volcanic and earthquake activity. This is main place where mountains are created.

    Type of plate boundary determines activity.

    3 types

    diverging (spreading)

    converging (colliding)

    transform (sliding past each other)

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    Crustal Processes

    Destruction (subduction)

    Creation (volcanism )

    Alteration / deformation (folding and

    faulting)

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    Geography of the Plates

    7 major plates; several minor plates

    Small plates / boundaries still unknown

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    Plate Margins: how do we know?

    Marked by volcanic and tectonic activity

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    Divergent Plate Boundaries

    Landscape features:

    land: rift valleys, volcanic mountains, thinning crust

    ocean/sea: rift valleys,

    mountain ranges

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    Divergent Plate Boundaries

    Examples:

    Atlantic Mid-Oceanic Ridge

    Red Sea

    Rift valleys of eastern Africa

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    Convergent Plate Boundaries Activity:

    subduction; shallow to deep earthquakes; volcanism (continental)

    Features:

    ocean trench; explosive volcanic mtns on continental margin

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    Earth Materials

    Three major rock types Igneous

    Sedimentary

    Metamorphic

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    Igneous Rocks

    Igneous (ignus = fire)

    Formed from the cooling of molten rock (magma/lava), a process called crystallization.

    Slow cooling larger crystals > dense rock

    Rapid cooling small crystals > lighter rock

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    Two classes of igneous rocks

    intrusive: formed inside the Earth

    extrusive: formed at Earths surface

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    Igneous Intrusive Rocks Cools slowly (thousands of years)

    Visible crystals

    Examples

    - granite - diorite - gabbro

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    Igneous Extrusive Rocks Cools rapidly - exposed to surface

    No visible crystals

    Examples

    - rhyolite - andesite -basalt

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    Some unique rock types

    Pumice (vesicular)

    - sometimes so light it floats!

    Obsidian

    glassy, curved fracturing

    used for arrowheads by Native Americans

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    Typical Igneous Intrusions

    Know: Batholith and Dike

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    Exposed Batholiths

    Sierra Nevada, CA

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    Sills and Dikes

    Dike: Grand Canyon, AZ

    Granite sill in schistDike: Coast Ranges, BC

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    Sills and Dikes

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    Igneous Extrusive Landscapes

    Volcanic neck and dike: Shiprock, NM

    Volcanic cones, obsidian flow: Mono Craters, CA

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    Sedimentary Rocks

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    Compaction Cementing

    Sedimentary

    Rocks

    Formation

    Relative Abundance by

    Type

  • By Dr. Muhammad Edisar, MT 102Sandstone (larger grains)

    Shale (fine grains)

    Limestone (CaCO3)

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    Where do Sedimentary Rocks Form?

    Terrestrial environments (non-marine)

    Rivers and floodplains (fluvial environment)

    Lakes

    Deserts (aeolian environment)

    Marine environments

    Continental shelf

    Continental slope and rise (deep sea fans)

    Abyssal plain

    Beach and barrier islands

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    Metamorphic Rocks or Thats very Gneiss, but I dont give a Schist!

    Gneiss (broad foliation)

    Schist (narrow foliation)

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    Which Type?

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    Which Type?

    Sedimentary - limestone and shale

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    What type?

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    What type? Metamorphic - Amitsoq Gneiss, Greenland, Oldest known rocks

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    What type?

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    What type? Sedimentary - Sandstone in Utah

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    What type?

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    What type? Extrusive Igneous -Reunion Island, S. Pacific

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    What type?

    Morro Rock, CA

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    What type? Intrusive Igneous

    Morro Rock, CADevils Tower, Wyoming

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    The Rock Cycle