Description

Book Synopsis

Get a rock-solid grasp on geology

Geology For Dummies is ideal reading for anyonewith an interest in the fundamental concepts of geology, whether they''re lifelong learners with a fascination for the subject or college students interested in pursuing geology or earth sciences.

Presented in a straightforward, trusted formatand tracking to a typical introductory geology course at the college levelthis book features a thorough introduction to the study of earth, its materials, and its processes.

  • Rock records and geologic time
  • Large-scale motion of tectonic plates
  • Matter, minerals, and rocks
  • The geological processes on earth''s surface

Rock that geology class with Geology For Dummies!



Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 2

Icons Used in This Book 2

Beyond the Book 3

Where to Go from Here 3

Part 1: Studying The Earth 5

Chapter 1: Rocks for Jocks (and Everybody Else) 7

Finding Your Inner Scientist 8

Making observations every day 8

Jumping to conclusions 8

Focusing on Rock Formation and Transformation 8

Understanding how rocks form 9

Tumbling through the rock cycle 9

Mapping Continental Movements 10

Unifying geology with plate tectonics theory 10

Debating a mechanism for plate movements 11

Moving Rocks around on Earth’s Surface 11

Interpreting a Long History of Life on Earth 12

Using relative versus absolute dating 12

Witnessing evolution in the fossil record 13

Chapter 2: Observing Earth through a Scientific Lens 15

Realizing That Science Is Not Just for Scientists 15

Using a Methodical Approach: The Scientific Method 16

Sensing something new 17

I have a hypothesis! 18

Testing your hypothesis: Experiments 18

Crunching the numbers 19

Interpreting results 21

Sharing the findings 21

Building New Knowledge: A Scientific Theory 21

It’s never “just a theory” 22

Scientific theory versus scientific law 22

The road to paradigms 23

Speaking in Tongues: Why Geologists Seem to Speak a Separate Language 23

Lamination vs foliation: Similar outcomes from different processes 24

Gabbro vs basalt: Different outcomes from similar processes 24

Chapter 3: From Here to Eternity: The Past, Present, and Future of Geologic Thought 27

Catastrophe Strikes Again and Again 28

Early Thoughts on the Origin of Rocks 28

Developing Modern Geologic Understanding 29

Reading the rock layers: Steno’s stratigraphy 29

These things take time! Hutton’s hypothesis 30

What has been will be: Lyell’s principles 31

Uniformi-what? Understanding the Earth through Uniformitarianism 32

Pulling It All Together: The Theory of Plate Tectonics 32

Forging Ahead into New Frontiers 33

Asking how, where, and why: Mountain building and plate boundaries 33

Mysteries of the past: Snowball earth, first life, and mass extinctions 34

Predicting the future: Earthquakes and climate change 35

Out of this world: Planetary geology and the search for life 37

Chapter 4: Home Sweet Home: Planet Earth 39

Earth’s Spheres 39

Examining Earth’s Geosphere 41

Defining Earth’s layers 41

Examining each layer 43

Part 2: Elements, Minerals, And Rocks 49

Chapter 5: It’s Elemental, My Dear: A Very Basic Chemistry of Elements and Compounds 51

The Smallest Matter: Atoms and Atomic Structure 52

Getting to know the periodic table 53

Interpreting isotopes 56

Charging particles: Ions 56

Chemically Bonding 57

Donating electrons (ionic bonds) 57

Sharing electrons (covalent bonds) 57

Migrating electrons (metallic bonds) 58

Formulating Compounds 60

Chapter 6: Minerals: The Building Blocks of Rocks 61

Meeting Mineral Requirements 62

Making Crystals 62

Identifying Minerals Using Physical Characteristics 63

Observing transparency, color, luster, and streak 63

Measuring mineral strength 64

If it tastes like salt, it must be halite: Noting unique mineral properties 68

Measuring properties in the lab 69

Realizing Most Rocks Are Built from Silicate Minerals 70

Finding silicates in many shapes 71

Grouping silicate minerals 74

Remembering the Nonsilicate Minerals 74

Carbonates 74

Sulfides and sulfates 75

Oxides 75

Native elements 76

Evaporites 76

Gemstones 77

Chapter 7: Recognizing Rocks: Igneous, Sedimentary, and Metamorphic Types 79

Mama Magma: Birthing Igneous Rocks 80

Remembering how magma is made 80

Classifying melt composition 81

Reacting in sequence: Bowen’s reaction series 81

Evolving magmas 83

Crystallizing one way or another: Igneous rocks 84

Classifying igneous rocks 85

Studying volcanic structures 89

Looking below the surface 92

Merging Many Single Grains of Sand: Sedimentary Rocks 94

Weathering rocks into sediments 95

Changing from sediment into rock 98

Sizing up the grains: Classifying sedimentary rocks 99

Searching for sedimentary basins 102

Telling stories of the past: Sedimentary structures 103

Stuck between a Rock and a Hard Place: Metamorphic Rocks 106

Turning up the heat and pressure: Metamorphism 106

Grading metamorphism with index minerals 107

Between the mineral sheets: Foliation, or maybe not 108

Categorizing metamorphic rocks 110

Tumbling through the Rock Cycle: How Rocks Change from One Type to Another 112

Part 3: One Theory To Explain It All: Plate Tectonics 115

Chapter 8: Adding Up the Evidence for Plate Tectonics 117

Drifting Apart: Wegener’s Idea of Continental Drift 118

Continental puzzle solving 118

Fossil matching 119

Stratigraphic stories 120

Icy cold climates of long ago 122

Meeting at the equator 123

Searching for a mechanism 123

Coming Together: How Technology Sheds Light on Plate Tectonics 124

Mapping the seafloor 124

Flip-flopping magnetic poles: Paleomagnetism and seafloor spreading 125

Measuring plate movements 127

Unifying the theory 127

Chapter 9: When Crustal Plates Meet, It’s All Relative 129

Density Is Key 130

Two of a Kind: Continental and Oceanic Crust 131

Dark and dense: Oceanic crust 131

Thick and fluffy: Continental crust 131

Understanding Why Density Matters: Isostasy 132

Defining Plate Boundaries by Their Relative Motion 133

Driving apart: Divergent plate boundaries 134

Crashing together: Convergent plate boundaries 136

Slip-sliding along: Transform plate boundaries 139

Shaping Topography with Plate Movements 141

Deforming the crust at plate boundaries 141

Compressing rocks into folds 142

Faulting in response to stress 144

Building mountains 146

Chapter 10: Who’s Driving This Thing? Mantle Convection and Plate Movement 149

Running in Circles: Models of Mantle Convection 150

Mantle plumes: Just like the lava in your lamp 152

The slab-pull and ridge-push models 152

Using Convection to Explain Magma, Volcanoes, and Underwater Mountains 153

Plate friction: Melting rock beneath the earth’s crust 154

Creating volcanic arcs and hotspots 154

Birthing new seafloor at mid-ocean ridges 158

Shake, Rattle, and Roll: How Plate Movements Cause Earthquakes 158

Responding elastically 159

Sending waves through the earth 160

Measuring magnitude 160

Part 4: Superficially Speaking: About Surface Processes 163

Chapter 11: Gravity Takes Its Toll: Mass Wasting 165

Holding Steady or Falling Down: Friction versus Gravity 166

Focusing on the Materials Involved 167

Loose materials: Resting at the angle of repose 167

Bedrock: Losing its stability 168

Triggering Mass Movements 168

Adding water to the mix 168

Changing the slope angle 169

Shaking things up: Earthquakes 170

Removing vegetation 170

Moving Massive Amounts of Earth, Quickly 171

Falls 171

Slides and slumps 171

Flows 172

A More Subtle Approach: Creep and Soil Flow (Solifluction) 173

Chapter 12: Water: Above and Below Ground 175

Hydrologic Cycling 176

Driving the cycle with evaporation 176

Traveling across a continent 177

Streams: Moving Sediments toward the Ocean 178

Draining the basin 178

Two types of flow 179

Measuring stream characteristics 180

Carrying a heavy load 180

Measuring what is transported 181

Eroding a Stream Channel to Base Level 182

Seeking Equilibrium after Changes in Base Level 183

Leaving Their Mark: How Streams Create Landforms 184

Draining the basin 184

Meandering along 185

Depositing sediments along the way 187

Reaching the sea 187

Flowing beneath Your Feet: Groundwater 188

Infiltrating tiny spaces underground 188

Measuring porosity and permeability 189

Setting the water table 189

Springing from rocks 190

That sinking feeling: Karst, caves, and sinkholes 192

Chapter 13: Flowing Slowly toward the Sea: Glaciers 195

Identifying Three Types of Glaciers 196

Understanding Ice as a Geologic Force 196

Transforming snow into ice 197

Balancing the glacial budget 197

Flowing solidly down the mountain 198

Eroding at a Snail’s Pace: Landforms Created by Glacial Erosion 199

Plucking and abrading along the way 200

Creating their own valleys 200

Speaking French: Cirques, arêtes, et roche moutonnées 201

Leaving It All Behind: Glacial Deposits 203

Depositing the till 203

Plains, trains, eskers, and kames 204

Behaving erratically: Large boulders in odd places 206

Where Have All the Glaciers Gone? 206

Filling the erosional gaps 206

Cycling through ice ages 207

Rebounding isostatically 209

Chapter 14: Blowing in the Wind: Moving Sediments without Water 211

Lacking Water: Arid Regions of the Earth 212

Transporting Particles by Air 212

Skipping right along: Bed load and saltation 213

Suspending particles in air 214

Deflating and Abrading: Features of Wind Erosion 214

Removing sediments 215

Scratching the surface 215

Just Add Wind: Dunes and Other Depositional Wind Features 216

Migrating piles of sand: Dunes 217

Shaping sand 218

Laying down layers of loess 219

Paving the Desert: Deposition or Erosion? 221

Chapter 15: Catch a Wave: The Evolution of Shorelines 223

Breaking Free: Waves and Wave Motion 223

Dissecting wave anatomy 223

Starting to roll 224

Going with the flow: Currents and tides 226

Shaping Shorelines 228

Carving cliffs and other features 228

Budgeting to build sandbars 228

Categorizing Coastlines 230

Part 5: Long, Long Ago In This Galaxy Right Here 233

Chapter 16: Getting a Grip on Geologic Time 235

The Layer Cake of Time: Stratigraphy and Relative Dating 236

Speaking relatively 236

Sorting out the strata 236

Putting rock layers in the right order 237

Losing time in the layers 238

Show Me the Numbers: Methods of Absolute Dating 240

Measuring radioactive decay 241

Common radioactive isotopes for geological dating 244

Other exacting methods of geological dating 245

Relatively Absolute: Combining Methods for the Best Results 248

Eons, Eras, and Epochs (Oh My!): Structuring the Geologic Timescale 249

Chapter 17: A Record of Life in the Rocks 253

Explaining Change, Not Origins: The Theory of Evolution 254

The Evolution of a Theory 254

Acquiring traits doesn’t do it 254

Naturally, selecting for survival 255

Mendel’s peas please 255

Genetic nuts and bolts 256

Spontaneously mutating genes 256

Speciating right and left 257

Putting Evolution to the Test 258

Against All Odds: The Fossilization of Lifeforms 259

Bones, teeth, and shell: Body fossils 259

Just passing through: Trace fossils 260

Correcting for Bias in the Fossil Record 261

Hypothesizing Relationships: Cladistics 262

Chapter 18: Time before Time Began: The Precambrian 265

In the Beginning Earth’s Creation from a Nebulous Cloud 266

Addressing Archean Rocks 267

Creating continents 267

Revving up the rock cycle 267

Feeling hot, hot, hot: Evidence for extreme temperatures 269

Originating with Orogens: Supercontinents of the

Proterozoic Eon 270

Single Cells, Algal Mats, and the Early Atmosphere 271

Hunting early prokaryotes and eukaryotes 271

You know it as pond scum: Cyanobacteria 272

Waiting to inhale: The formation of Earth’s atmosphere 275

Questioning the Earliest Complex Life: The Ediacaran Fauna 278

Chapter 19: Teeming with Life: The Paleozoic Era 281

Exploding with Life: The Cambrian Period 282

Toughen up! Developing shells 282

Ruling arthropods of the seafloor: Trilobites 283

Building Reefs All Over the Place 284

Swimming freely: Ammonoids and nautiloids 285

Exploring freshwater: Eurypterids 287

Spinal Tapping: Animals with Backbones 287

Fish evolve body armor, teeth, and legs? 287

Venturing onto land: Early amphibians 290

Adapting to life on land: The reptiles 290

Planting Roots: Early Plant Evolution 291

Tracking the Geologic Events of the Paleozoic 293

Constructing continents 293

Reading the rocks: Transgressions and regressions 294

Fossilizing carbon fuels 297

Pangaea, the most super of supercontinents 297

Chapter 20: Mesozoic World: When Dinosaurs Dominated 299

Driving Pangaea Apart at the Seams 300

One continent becomes many 300

Influencing global climate 301

Creating the mountains of North America 302

Repopulating the Seas after Extinction 303

The Symbiosis of Flowers 304

Recognizing All the Mesozoic Reptiles 306

Flocking together 308

Climbing the Dinosaur Family Tree 308

Branching out: Ornithischia and Saurischia 308

Horned faces and armor: Ornithischian dinosaurs 309

Long necks and meat eaters: Saurischian dinosaurs 312

Flocking Together: The Evolutionary Road to Birds 313

Laying the Groundwork for Later Dominance: Early

Mammal Evolution 314

Chapter 21: The Cenozoic Era: Mammals Take Over 315

Putting Continents in Their Proper (Okay, Current) Places 316

Creating modern geography 316

Consuming the Farallon Plate 317

Carving the Grand Canyon with uplift 319

Icing over northern continents 320

Entering the Age of Mammals 320

Regulating body temperature 322

Filling every niche 323

Living Large: Massive Mammals Then and Now 323

Nosing around elephant evolution 324

Returning to the sea: Whales 325

Larger than life: Giant mammals of the ice ages 326

Right Here, Right Now: The Reign of Homo Sapiens 327

Arguing for the Anthropocene 329

Altering the climate 329

Shaping the landscape 330

Leaving evidence in the rock record 332

Chapter 22: And Then There Were None: Major Extinction Events in Earth’s History 333

Explaining Extinctions 334

Heads up! Astronomical impacts 334

Lava, lava everywhere: Volcanic eruptions and flood basalts 335

Shifting sea levels 337

Changing climate 337

End Times, at Least Five Times 337

Cooling tropical waters 338

Reducing carbon dioxide levels 338

The Great Dying 339

Paving the way for dinosaurs 340

Demolishing dinosaurs: The K/T boundary 340

Modern Extinctions and Biodiversity 342

Hunting the megafauna 342

Reducing biodiversity 343

Part 6: The Part of Tens 345

Chapter 23: Ten Ways You Use Geologic Resources Every Day 347

Burning Fossil Fuels 347

Playing with Plastics 348

Gathering Gemstones 348

Drinking Water 349

Creating Concrete 349

Paving Roads 350

Accessing Geothermal Heat 350

Fertilizing with Phosphate 350

Constructing Computers 351

Building with Beautiful Stone 351

Chapter 24: Ten Geologic Hazards 353

Changing Course: River Flooding 353

Caving In: Sinkholes 354

Sliding Down: Landslides 354

Shaking Things Up: Earthquakes 355

Washing Away Coastal Towns: Tsunamis 355

Destroying Farmland and Coastal Bluffs: Erosion 356

Fiery Explosions of Molten Rock: Volcanic Eruptions 356

Melting Ice with Fire: Jokulhlaups 357

Flowing Rivers of Mud: Lahars 357

Watching the Poles: Geomagnetism 358

Index 359

Geology For Dummies

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    A Paperback / softback by Alecia M. Spooner

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      View other formats and editions of Geology For Dummies by Alecia M. Spooner

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 14/05/2020
      ISBN13: 9781119652878, 978-1119652878
      ISBN10: 1119652871

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Get a rock-solid grasp on geology

      Geology For Dummies is ideal reading for anyonewith an interest in the fundamental concepts of geology, whether they''re lifelong learners with a fascination for the subject or college students interested in pursuing geology or earth sciences.

      Presented in a straightforward, trusted formatand tracking to a typical introductory geology course at the college levelthis book features a thorough introduction to the study of earth, its materials, and its processes.

      • Rock records and geologic time
      • Large-scale motion of tectonic plates
      • Matter, minerals, and rocks
      • The geological processes on earth''s surface

      Rock that geology class with Geology For Dummies!



      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      About This Book 1

      Foolish Assumptions 2

      Icons Used in This Book 2

      Beyond the Book 3

      Where to Go from Here 3

      Part 1: Studying The Earth 5

      Chapter 1: Rocks for Jocks (and Everybody Else) 7

      Finding Your Inner Scientist 8

      Making observations every day 8

      Jumping to conclusions 8

      Focusing on Rock Formation and Transformation 8

      Understanding how rocks form 9

      Tumbling through the rock cycle 9

      Mapping Continental Movements 10

      Unifying geology with plate tectonics theory 10

      Debating a mechanism for plate movements 11

      Moving Rocks around on Earth’s Surface 11

      Interpreting a Long History of Life on Earth 12

      Using relative versus absolute dating 12

      Witnessing evolution in the fossil record 13

      Chapter 2: Observing Earth through a Scientific Lens 15

      Realizing That Science Is Not Just for Scientists 15

      Using a Methodical Approach: The Scientific Method 16

      Sensing something new 17

      I have a hypothesis! 18

      Testing your hypothesis: Experiments 18

      Crunching the numbers 19

      Interpreting results 21

      Sharing the findings 21

      Building New Knowledge: A Scientific Theory 21

      It’s never “just a theory” 22

      Scientific theory versus scientific law 22

      The road to paradigms 23

      Speaking in Tongues: Why Geologists Seem to Speak a Separate Language 23

      Lamination vs foliation: Similar outcomes from different processes 24

      Gabbro vs basalt: Different outcomes from similar processes 24

      Chapter 3: From Here to Eternity: The Past, Present, and Future of Geologic Thought 27

      Catastrophe Strikes Again and Again 28

      Early Thoughts on the Origin of Rocks 28

      Developing Modern Geologic Understanding 29

      Reading the rock layers: Steno’s stratigraphy 29

      These things take time! Hutton’s hypothesis 30

      What has been will be: Lyell’s principles 31

      Uniformi-what? Understanding the Earth through Uniformitarianism 32

      Pulling It All Together: The Theory of Plate Tectonics 32

      Forging Ahead into New Frontiers 33

      Asking how, where, and why: Mountain building and plate boundaries 33

      Mysteries of the past: Snowball earth, first life, and mass extinctions 34

      Predicting the future: Earthquakes and climate change 35

      Out of this world: Planetary geology and the search for life 37

      Chapter 4: Home Sweet Home: Planet Earth 39

      Earth’s Spheres 39

      Examining Earth’s Geosphere 41

      Defining Earth’s layers 41

      Examining each layer 43

      Part 2: Elements, Minerals, And Rocks 49

      Chapter 5: It’s Elemental, My Dear: A Very Basic Chemistry of Elements and Compounds 51

      The Smallest Matter: Atoms and Atomic Structure 52

      Getting to know the periodic table 53

      Interpreting isotopes 56

      Charging particles: Ions 56

      Chemically Bonding 57

      Donating electrons (ionic bonds) 57

      Sharing electrons (covalent bonds) 57

      Migrating electrons (metallic bonds) 58

      Formulating Compounds 60

      Chapter 6: Minerals: The Building Blocks of Rocks 61

      Meeting Mineral Requirements 62

      Making Crystals 62

      Identifying Minerals Using Physical Characteristics 63

      Observing transparency, color, luster, and streak 63

      Measuring mineral strength 64

      If it tastes like salt, it must be halite: Noting unique mineral properties 68

      Measuring properties in the lab 69

      Realizing Most Rocks Are Built from Silicate Minerals 70

      Finding silicates in many shapes 71

      Grouping silicate minerals 74

      Remembering the Nonsilicate Minerals 74

      Carbonates 74

      Sulfides and sulfates 75

      Oxides 75

      Native elements 76

      Evaporites 76

      Gemstones 77

      Chapter 7: Recognizing Rocks: Igneous, Sedimentary, and Metamorphic Types 79

      Mama Magma: Birthing Igneous Rocks 80

      Remembering how magma is made 80

      Classifying melt composition 81

      Reacting in sequence: Bowen’s reaction series 81

      Evolving magmas 83

      Crystallizing one way or another: Igneous rocks 84

      Classifying igneous rocks 85

      Studying volcanic structures 89

      Looking below the surface 92

      Merging Many Single Grains of Sand: Sedimentary Rocks 94

      Weathering rocks into sediments 95

      Changing from sediment into rock 98

      Sizing up the grains: Classifying sedimentary rocks 99

      Searching for sedimentary basins 102

      Telling stories of the past: Sedimentary structures 103

      Stuck between a Rock and a Hard Place: Metamorphic Rocks 106

      Turning up the heat and pressure: Metamorphism 106

      Grading metamorphism with index minerals 107

      Between the mineral sheets: Foliation, or maybe not 108

      Categorizing metamorphic rocks 110

      Tumbling through the Rock Cycle: How Rocks Change from One Type to Another 112

      Part 3: One Theory To Explain It All: Plate Tectonics 115

      Chapter 8: Adding Up the Evidence for Plate Tectonics 117

      Drifting Apart: Wegener’s Idea of Continental Drift 118

      Continental puzzle solving 118

      Fossil matching 119

      Stratigraphic stories 120

      Icy cold climates of long ago 122

      Meeting at the equator 123

      Searching for a mechanism 123

      Coming Together: How Technology Sheds Light on Plate Tectonics 124

      Mapping the seafloor 124

      Flip-flopping magnetic poles: Paleomagnetism and seafloor spreading 125

      Measuring plate movements 127

      Unifying the theory 127

      Chapter 9: When Crustal Plates Meet, It’s All Relative 129

      Density Is Key 130

      Two of a Kind: Continental and Oceanic Crust 131

      Dark and dense: Oceanic crust 131

      Thick and fluffy: Continental crust 131

      Understanding Why Density Matters: Isostasy 132

      Defining Plate Boundaries by Their Relative Motion 133

      Driving apart: Divergent plate boundaries 134

      Crashing together: Convergent plate boundaries 136

      Slip-sliding along: Transform plate boundaries 139

      Shaping Topography with Plate Movements 141

      Deforming the crust at plate boundaries 141

      Compressing rocks into folds 142

      Faulting in response to stress 144

      Building mountains 146

      Chapter 10: Who’s Driving This Thing? Mantle Convection and Plate Movement 149

      Running in Circles: Models of Mantle Convection 150

      Mantle plumes: Just like the lava in your lamp 152

      The slab-pull and ridge-push models 152

      Using Convection to Explain Magma, Volcanoes, and Underwater Mountains 153

      Plate friction: Melting rock beneath the earth’s crust 154

      Creating volcanic arcs and hotspots 154

      Birthing new seafloor at mid-ocean ridges 158

      Shake, Rattle, and Roll: How Plate Movements Cause Earthquakes 158

      Responding elastically 159

      Sending waves through the earth 160

      Measuring magnitude 160

      Part 4: Superficially Speaking: About Surface Processes 163

      Chapter 11: Gravity Takes Its Toll: Mass Wasting 165

      Holding Steady or Falling Down: Friction versus Gravity 166

      Focusing on the Materials Involved 167

      Loose materials: Resting at the angle of repose 167

      Bedrock: Losing its stability 168

      Triggering Mass Movements 168

      Adding water to the mix 168

      Changing the slope angle 169

      Shaking things up: Earthquakes 170

      Removing vegetation 170

      Moving Massive Amounts of Earth, Quickly 171

      Falls 171

      Slides and slumps 171

      Flows 172

      A More Subtle Approach: Creep and Soil Flow (Solifluction) 173

      Chapter 12: Water: Above and Below Ground 175

      Hydrologic Cycling 176

      Driving the cycle with evaporation 176

      Traveling across a continent 177

      Streams: Moving Sediments toward the Ocean 178

      Draining the basin 178

      Two types of flow 179

      Measuring stream characteristics 180

      Carrying a heavy load 180

      Measuring what is transported 181

      Eroding a Stream Channel to Base Level 182

      Seeking Equilibrium after Changes in Base Level 183

      Leaving Their Mark: How Streams Create Landforms 184

      Draining the basin 184

      Meandering along 185

      Depositing sediments along the way 187

      Reaching the sea 187

      Flowing beneath Your Feet: Groundwater 188

      Infiltrating tiny spaces underground 188

      Measuring porosity and permeability 189

      Setting the water table 189

      Springing from rocks 190

      That sinking feeling: Karst, caves, and sinkholes 192

      Chapter 13: Flowing Slowly toward the Sea: Glaciers 195

      Identifying Three Types of Glaciers 196

      Understanding Ice as a Geologic Force 196

      Transforming snow into ice 197

      Balancing the glacial budget 197

      Flowing solidly down the mountain 198

      Eroding at a Snail’s Pace: Landforms Created by Glacial Erosion 199

      Plucking and abrading along the way 200

      Creating their own valleys 200

      Speaking French: Cirques, arêtes, et roche moutonnées 201

      Leaving It All Behind: Glacial Deposits 203

      Depositing the till 203

      Plains, trains, eskers, and kames 204

      Behaving erratically: Large boulders in odd places 206

      Where Have All the Glaciers Gone? 206

      Filling the erosional gaps 206

      Cycling through ice ages 207

      Rebounding isostatically 209

      Chapter 14: Blowing in the Wind: Moving Sediments without Water 211

      Lacking Water: Arid Regions of the Earth 212

      Transporting Particles by Air 212

      Skipping right along: Bed load and saltation 213

      Suspending particles in air 214

      Deflating and Abrading: Features of Wind Erosion 214

      Removing sediments 215

      Scratching the surface 215

      Just Add Wind: Dunes and Other Depositional Wind Features 216

      Migrating piles of sand: Dunes 217

      Shaping sand 218

      Laying down layers of loess 219

      Paving the Desert: Deposition or Erosion? 221

      Chapter 15: Catch a Wave: The Evolution of Shorelines 223

      Breaking Free: Waves and Wave Motion 223

      Dissecting wave anatomy 223

      Starting to roll 224

      Going with the flow: Currents and tides 226

      Shaping Shorelines 228

      Carving cliffs and other features 228

      Budgeting to build sandbars 228

      Categorizing Coastlines 230

      Part 5: Long, Long Ago In This Galaxy Right Here 233

      Chapter 16: Getting a Grip on Geologic Time 235

      The Layer Cake of Time: Stratigraphy and Relative Dating 236

      Speaking relatively 236

      Sorting out the strata 236

      Putting rock layers in the right order 237

      Losing time in the layers 238

      Show Me the Numbers: Methods of Absolute Dating 240

      Measuring radioactive decay 241

      Common radioactive isotopes for geological dating 244

      Other exacting methods of geological dating 245

      Relatively Absolute: Combining Methods for the Best Results 248

      Eons, Eras, and Epochs (Oh My!): Structuring the Geologic Timescale 249

      Chapter 17: A Record of Life in the Rocks 253

      Explaining Change, Not Origins: The Theory of Evolution 254

      The Evolution of a Theory 254

      Acquiring traits doesn’t do it 254

      Naturally, selecting for survival 255

      Mendel’s peas please 255

      Genetic nuts and bolts 256

      Spontaneously mutating genes 256

      Speciating right and left 257

      Putting Evolution to the Test 258

      Against All Odds: The Fossilization of Lifeforms 259

      Bones, teeth, and shell: Body fossils 259

      Just passing through: Trace fossils 260

      Correcting for Bias in the Fossil Record 261

      Hypothesizing Relationships: Cladistics 262

      Chapter 18: Time before Time Began: The Precambrian 265

      In the Beginning Earth’s Creation from a Nebulous Cloud 266

      Addressing Archean Rocks 267

      Creating continents 267

      Revving up the rock cycle 267

      Feeling hot, hot, hot: Evidence for extreme temperatures 269

      Originating with Orogens: Supercontinents of the

      Proterozoic Eon 270

      Single Cells, Algal Mats, and the Early Atmosphere 271

      Hunting early prokaryotes and eukaryotes 271

      You know it as pond scum: Cyanobacteria 272

      Waiting to inhale: The formation of Earth’s atmosphere 275

      Questioning the Earliest Complex Life: The Ediacaran Fauna 278

      Chapter 19: Teeming with Life: The Paleozoic Era 281

      Exploding with Life: The Cambrian Period 282

      Toughen up! Developing shells 282

      Ruling arthropods of the seafloor: Trilobites 283

      Building Reefs All Over the Place 284

      Swimming freely: Ammonoids and nautiloids 285

      Exploring freshwater: Eurypterids 287

      Spinal Tapping: Animals with Backbones 287

      Fish evolve body armor, teeth, and legs? 287

      Venturing onto land: Early amphibians 290

      Adapting to life on land: The reptiles 290

      Planting Roots: Early Plant Evolution 291

      Tracking the Geologic Events of the Paleozoic 293

      Constructing continents 293

      Reading the rocks: Transgressions and regressions 294

      Fossilizing carbon fuels 297

      Pangaea, the most super of supercontinents 297

      Chapter 20: Mesozoic World: When Dinosaurs Dominated 299

      Driving Pangaea Apart at the Seams 300

      One continent becomes many 300

      Influencing global climate 301

      Creating the mountains of North America 302

      Repopulating the Seas after Extinction 303

      The Symbiosis of Flowers 304

      Recognizing All the Mesozoic Reptiles 306

      Flocking together 308

      Climbing the Dinosaur Family Tree 308

      Branching out: Ornithischia and Saurischia 308

      Horned faces and armor: Ornithischian dinosaurs 309

      Long necks and meat eaters: Saurischian dinosaurs 312

      Flocking Together: The Evolutionary Road to Birds 313

      Laying the Groundwork for Later Dominance: Early

      Mammal Evolution 314

      Chapter 21: The Cenozoic Era: Mammals Take Over 315

      Putting Continents in Their Proper (Okay, Current) Places 316

      Creating modern geography 316

      Consuming the Farallon Plate 317

      Carving the Grand Canyon with uplift 319

      Icing over northern continents 320

      Entering the Age of Mammals 320

      Regulating body temperature 322

      Filling every niche 323

      Living Large: Massive Mammals Then and Now 323

      Nosing around elephant evolution 324

      Returning to the sea: Whales 325

      Larger than life: Giant mammals of the ice ages 326

      Right Here, Right Now: The Reign of Homo Sapiens 327

      Arguing for the Anthropocene 329

      Altering the climate 329

      Shaping the landscape 330

      Leaving evidence in the rock record 332

      Chapter 22: And Then There Were None: Major Extinction Events in Earth’s History 333

      Explaining Extinctions 334

      Heads up! Astronomical impacts 334

      Lava, lava everywhere: Volcanic eruptions and flood basalts 335

      Shifting sea levels 337

      Changing climate 337

      End Times, at Least Five Times 337

      Cooling tropical waters 338

      Reducing carbon dioxide levels 338

      The Great Dying 339

      Paving the way for dinosaurs 340

      Demolishing dinosaurs: The K/T boundary 340

      Modern Extinctions and Biodiversity 342

      Hunting the megafauna 342

      Reducing biodiversity 343

      Part 6: The Part of Tens 345

      Chapter 23: Ten Ways You Use Geologic Resources Every Day 347

      Burning Fossil Fuels 347

      Playing with Plastics 348

      Gathering Gemstones 348

      Drinking Water 349

      Creating Concrete 349

      Paving Roads 350

      Accessing Geothermal Heat 350

      Fertilizing with Phosphate 350

      Constructing Computers 351

      Building with Beautiful Stone 351

      Chapter 24: Ten Geologic Hazards 353

      Changing Course: River Flooding 353

      Caving In: Sinkholes 354

      Sliding Down: Landslides 354

      Shaking Things Up: Earthquakes 355

      Washing Away Coastal Towns: Tsunamis 355

      Destroying Farmland and Coastal Bluffs: Erosion 356

      Fiery Explosions of Molten Rock: Volcanic Eruptions 356

      Melting Ice with Fire: Jokulhlaups 357

      Flowing Rivers of Mud: Lahars 357

      Watching the Poles: Geomagnetism 358

      Index 359

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