Determining The Age of Rocks

You might also like

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 14

Determining the

Age of Rocks
Relative Age of Rocks
Types of Rock

 Sedimentary rock forms from sediment


(sediment- solid particles of rock produced
by weathering and erosion by water and
wind)
* Igneous rock forms from volcanic lava
flows
* Metamorphic rock- forms from intense
heat and pressure
Relative Dating of Rocks

 The relative age of rocks determines


the age of rock layers as younger or
older, but does not give the exact age.
 The principle of uniformitarianism
states that forces that shaped the Earth
in the past continues to shape the earth
today (volcanoes and weathering and
erosion by wind and water).
Sedimentary Rocks
 Sedimentary rocks formed from sediment
deposited millions of years ago. Sedimentary
rocks are deposited in horizontal layers.
(principle of original horizontality)
 Sedimentary rock is deposited in horizontal
layers over geologic time with the oldest layer
on bottom and the youngest layer at the top
(principle of superposition)
Sedimentary Rock Layers
 Remember
-sedimentary rock
layers are horizontal
with the oldest at the
bottom and the
young at the top
unless the layers are
disturbed by a fault
or igneous intrusion
Faults and Igneous
Intrusions
 Sometimes sedimentary rock layers are
disturbed by geological forces. A crack in the
rock layer is called a fault. When igneous
rock (volcanic lava) intrudes or cuts through
layers of sedimentary rock it is called an
igneous intrusion.
 The principle of cross-cutting relationships
states that a fault or igneous intrusion is
always younger than the rock it cuts across.
Fault (Crack) in Sedimentary
rock
Here is a picture of a
fault or crack in the
rock
Igneous Intrusion in Rock
Layers
 Remember that
igneous intrusions
(lava) are always
younger than the rock
layers they cut
through. Note the
igneous intrusions
(volcanic rock) cutting
through the rock layer
Relative Age of Rock
 The Relative Age of the rock can be
determined by the sequence of the rock
layers using the Principle of Superposition
(oldest on the bottom and youngest at the
top).
 If the sedimentary rock layer has been
disturbed by a fault or igneous intrusion,
the fault or intrusion is always younger than
the rock layer they cut through (cross-cutting)
SWBAT: Describe what an index fossil is:
Finding the Relative Age of Rocks using Index Fossils

 Certain fossils called Index fossils help


geologists determine the Relative Age of
rocks.
 To be a useful Index fossil:
- the fossil must be widely distributed
different geographic areas
- and represent an organism that
existed only briefly
Index fossils
 Trilobites were a group of hard shelled
animals that evolved in shallow sea more
than 500 million years ago (trilobites
became extinct at the end of the
Paleozoic Era)
 Trilobites are useful as index fossils
because they were widely distributed
geographically and represent an
organism that existed briefly.
Example of an index fossil
(trilobite) in layers of
sedimentary rock. How old
is the bottom layer?
Continental Drift Theory
 All continents were once joined together
in a single landmass (supercontinent)
called Pangea
 Fossil evidence supports the
Continental Drift Theory. Fossils from
a fernlike plant Glossopteris have been
found in Africa, South America, Australia,
and Antarctica. The seeds could not have
traveled across the span of the oceans
Absolute Age of Rocks
 To determine the Relative Age of Rocks
geologists use the Principles of Superposition,
Cross-Cutting Relationships, and Index fossils.
 To determine the Absolute Age (exact age) of
rock, geologists use Radiometric Dating.
 How did geologist determine the Earth was 4.6
billion years old?

You might also like