**Feldspar: Silicon
and oxygen are common elements in all types of feldspar and sodium, potassium, calcium,
aluminium etc. are found in specific feldspar variety. Half of the earth’s
crust is composed of feldspar. It has light cream to salmon pink colour. It is
used in ceramics and glass making.
**Quartz: It is one of the most important components
of sand and granite. It consists of silica. It is a hard mineral virtually
insoluble in water. It is white or colourless and used in radio and radar. It
is one of the most important components of granite.
**Pyroxene:
Pyroxene consists of
calcium, aluminum, magnesium, iron and silica. Pyroxene forms 10 per cent of
the earth’s crust. It is commonly found in meteorites. It is in green or black colour.
**Amphibole:
Aluminium, calcium,
silica, iron, magnesium are the major elements of amphiboles. They form 7 per
cent of the earth’s crust. It is in green or black colour and is used in
asbestos industry. Hornblende is another form of amphiboles.
**Mica: It comprises of potassium, aluminium, magnesium,
iron, silica etc. It forms 4 per cent of the earth’s crust. It is commonly
found in igneous and metamorphic rocks. It is used in electrical instruments.
**Olivine: Magnesium, iron and silica are major
elements of olivine. It is used in jewellery. It is usually a greenish crystal,
often found in basaltic rocks.
**Petrology is
science of rocks. A petrologist studies rocks in all their aspects viz., mineral
composition, texture, structure, origin, occurrence, alteration and relationship
with other rocks.
**When magma in
its upward movement cools and turns into solid form it is called igneous rock.
The process of cooling and solidification can happen in the earth’s crust or on
the surface of the earth.
**If molten material
is cooled slowly at great depths, mineral grains may be very large. Sudden
cooling (at the surface) results in small and smooth grains. Intermediate
conditions of cooling would result in intermediate sizes of grains making up igneous
rocks. Ex. Granite, gabbro, pegmatite, basalt, volcanic breccia and tuff.
**Such
fragments are transported by different exogenous agencies and deposited. These
deposits through compaction
turn into
rocks. This process is called lithification.
**sedimentary
rocks are classified into three major groups: (i) mechanically formed —
sandstone, conglomerate, limestone, shale, loess etc. are examples; (ii)
organically formed— geyserite, chalk, limestone, coal etc. are some examples; (iii)
chemically formed — chert, limestone, halite, potash etc.
**Mechanical
disruption and reorganization of the original minerals within rocks due to breaking
and crushing without any appreciable chemical changes is called dynamic metamorphism.
The materials of rocks chemically alter and recrystallise due to thermal
metamorphism. There are two types of thermal metamorphism — contact
metamorphism
and regional
metamorphism. In contact metamorphism the rocks come in contact with hot
intruding magma and lava
and the rock
materials recrystallise under high temperatures. In regional metamorphism,
rocks undergo recrystallisation due to deformation caused by tectonic shearing
together with high temperature or pressure or both.
**In the
process of metamorphism in some rocks grains or minerals get arranged in layers
or lines. Such an arrangement of minerals or grains in metamorphic rocks is
called foliation or lineation. Sometimes minerals or materials of different groups are arranged into
alternating thin to thick layers appearing in light and dark shades. Such a
structure in metamorphic rocks is called banding and rocks displaying banding are called banded
rocks.
**Metamorphic
rocks are classified into two major groups — foliated rocks and non-foliated rocks.
Gneissoid, granite, syenite, slate, schist, marble, quartzite etc.
**Semi-diurnal
tide : The most common
tidal pattern, featuring two high tides and two low tides each day. The
successive high or low tides are approximately of the same height.
**Diurnal
tide : There is only one
high tide and one low tide during each day. The successive high and low tides
are approximately of the same height.
**Mixed
tide : Tides having
variations in height are known as mixed tides. These tides generally occur
along the west coast of North America and on many islands of the Pacific Ocean.
**Spring
tides : The position of
both the sun and the moon in relation to the earth has direct bearing on tide
height. When the sun, the moon and the earth are in a straight line, the height
of the tide will be higher. These are called spring tides and they occur twice
a month, one on full moon period and another during new moon period.
**Neap
tides : Normally, there is
a seven day interval between the spring tides and neap tides. At this time the
sun and moon are at right angles to each other and the forces of the sun and
moon tend to counteract one another. The Moon’s attraction, though more than
twice as strong as the sun’s, is diminished by the counteracting force of the
sun’s gravitational pull.
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