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  2. Fracture (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fracture_(geology)

    The reaction between certain fluids and the minerals the rock is composed of can lower the stress required for fracture below the stress required throughout the rest of the rock. For instance, water and quartz can react to form a substitution of OH molecules for the O molecules in the quartz mineral lattice near the fracture tip.

  3. Geology of Greenland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_Greenland

    The bedrock is not nearly as metamorphosed as the surrounding gneiss bedrock and is therefore of interest for answering how the Earth's surface appeared billions of years ago. There is a massive magnetite resource in this area. There are large deposits of rare-earth oxides at Kvanefjeld.

  4. Erosion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erosion

    In a weak bedrock (containing material more erodible than the surrounding rocks) erosion pattern, on the contrary, the amount of over deepening is limited because ice velocities and erosion rates are reduced. [35] Glaciers can also cause pieces of bedrock to crack off in the process of plucking.

  5. Joint (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_(geology)

    A joint is a break of natural origin in a layer or body of rock that lacks visible or measurable movement parallel to the surface (plane) of the fracture ("Mode 1" Fracture). Although joints can occur singly, they most frequently appear as joint sets and systems.

  6. Fault block - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fault_block

    These can be small or form extensive rift valley systems, such as the East African Rift zone. Death Valley in California is a smaller example. There are two main types of block mountains; uplifted blocks between two faults and tilted blocks mainly controlled by one fault.

  7. Spheroidal weathering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spheroidal_weathering

    Spheroidal or woolsack weathering in granite on Haytor, Dartmoor, England Spheroidal weathering in granite, Estaca de Bares, A Coruña, Galicia, Spain Woolsack weathering in sandstone at the Externsteine rocks, Teutoburg Forest, Germany Corestones near Musina, South Africa that were created by spherodial weathering and exposed by the removal of surrounding saprolite by erosion.

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  9. Outcrop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outcrop

    Some of the types of information that cannot be obtained except from bedrock outcrops or by precise drilling and coring operations, are structural geology features orientations (e.g. bedding planes, fold axes, foliation), depositional features orientations (e.g. paleo-current directions, grading, facies changes), paleomagnetic orientations.