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ES 10 Geologic Principles;	Test 2;		October 25, 1994;	Alfred Hochstaedter


1. a) (5 pts) What causes a stream to be either braided or meandering? Where applicable, be sure to
include the concepts or roles of gradient, discharge, load, and the resistance to erosion of the river
banks in your answer.

Braided: high gradient, variable discharge, high load, easily erodable banks; 


Meandering: low load relative to discharge, low gradient, easily erodable banks.


b) (5 pts) In order to continue your answer you draw a meandering stream, labelling the thalweg
(i.e., the region of greatest depth and velocity), point bar deposits, and regions of greatest bank
erosion. Also show how your meandering stream might evolve to form an oxbow lake.


Thalweg stays near the outside of meanders; point bars form on the inside of
meanders, greatest bank erosion occurs on the outside of meanders (near thalweg).
Oxbow lakes form when the outside of two meanders meet each other due to erosion,
and river takes shortest route to get downhill.


c) (3 pts) How much of the EarthÕs total fresh water, not including that contained in the polar ice
caps, is groundwater?

Any answer that says almost all of it.

2. a) (4 pts) What does the coefficient of permeability represent? What are its units? What are
some typical values? How does it influence discharge?

Coeffeciant of permeability represents how easily water can flow through a given rock
or sediment. Units are in length / time (velocity). Typical values range from
1 to 1X10-10cm/s. The greater the permeability, the greater the discharge, or amount
of water flowing through the rock.

b) (4 pts) What is porosity and how does it differ from permeability? 

Porosity measures the amount of pore space within a rock or sediment, while
permeability measures the ease with which water may flow through a rock or
sediment. Material may be porus without being permeable.


c) (4 pts) What is the hydrologic gradient? What are its units? How would you determine a value
in a real-life situation? How does the hydrologic gradient influence discharge?

The hydrologic gradient is the difference in elevation per horizontal distance that the
water travels. Dimensionless. In a real-life situation, one would measure horizontal
distance as well as difference in elevation between the two points that one wishes to
study. The greater the hydrologic gradient, the greater the discharge.

d) (5 pts) Draw a cross section that relates geology to ground-water hydrology to explain the sort
of setting your friends will need to find in order to narrow down the places they will look for an
artisan spring or well. Using your drawing, explain where an artisan spring or well might be found
and why. In addition to more obvious features, please be sure to include the potentiometric surface
and recharge region in your drawing.

Recharge region is where confined aquifer crops out. Artisan well or spring is located
where potentiometric surface lies above ground surface. Partial credit for
potentiometric surface above confining layer, but not above ground surface.

3. a) (3 pts) How do waves form in the first place?

Offshore winds blowing across the water.

b) (3 pts) Why do waves ÒbreakÓ?

When they ÒfeelÓ the bottom, they start to slow down. The top goes faster than the
bottom and hence they break.


c) ( 4 pts) What causes wave refraction, and what are at least two examples of the geological
effects?

Shallow water causes refraction because it slows down the water in that specific area.
Ex1: wave energy dissapated in pocket beaches, therefore sand deposition and nice
beaches.
Ex2: longshore drift due to waves not approaching shore in exactly perpendicular
direction.


d) (3 pts) How do waves cause longshore drift to occur?

As waves enter shoreline in non-perpendicular direction, sand is washed up onto
shore at an angle towards one direction or the other. Water washes back out to sea in
exactly perpendicular direction due to gravity. This process, multiplied many times
over, causes longshore drift.


e) (5 pts)  Beach morphology (i.e., shape) can often be described as the result of competing forces
between tidal forces and longshore drift. This is especially true at the mouths of lagoons or rivers.
Please give one example of this. Describe or draw a beach and explain which aspects of its
morphology are due to longshore drift and which are due to tidal forces. Use a diagram if you like
to make your answer more clear. 

Anything thoughtful here is acceptable. I was thinkng about spits forming at the mouths
of rivers or estuaries: longshore drift wants to close the mouth, while tidal action keeps
it open. Something about Barrier Islands would work well too.

4. a) (5 pts) What, exactly, do stress and strain measure, and why do we plot them against each
other? What are their units?

Stress is the force / unit area that causes the deformation; it represents the thing that is
doing the pushing or pulling. Strain is a dimensionless description of a change in
shape or size of something. We plot them against each other to find out how much
stress is needed to cause a certain amount of strain; to find out how much elastic and
ductile strain can occur before rupture.


b) (4 pts) Label which of the following diagrams refers to brittle deformation and which indicates
ductile deformation. Also, list and briefly explain or provide examples of the four factors that
control whether ductile or brittle deformation will occur.

The more ductile deformation shown on the diagram, the more ductile (or less brittle)
the material in question is.
1)Temperature
2)Pressure
3)Time and strain rate: slow rates or long times favor ductile deformation
4)Composition: clays, micas, calcite are ductile; qtz, f-spar, granite, SS are brittle.


c) (5 pts) Complete the following table:

kind of stress	compressional	extensional 	shear
picture of typical fault
in this environment






			
name of this kind of 
faulting	Thrust/reverse	normal	strike-slip

d) (5 pts) The following is a map view of a plunging anticline. Label the limbs and axis. In what
orientation would you expect to find axial plane cleavage? Which direction is the anticline
plunging? Where are the youngest rocks? Where are the oldest rocks?

Axial plane cleavage parallels the axial plane, which splits the limbs and conects the
fold axes of all the different layers.

5. a) (5 pts) What causes EQs? What role does elastic rebound play?

Motion between plates (or crustal blocks) cause EQs. Elastic rebound is the return of
elastic strain to a more original position during an EQ; the release of stored elastic
energy by slippage on faults.




b) (4 pts) What is the difference between magnitude and intensity? What do each of these depend
on?

Magnitude is the energy released during an EQ, measured by the amplitude of
seismic waves a certain distance away from the epicenter. Each EQ has only one
magnitude, (measured by the Richter scale). Intensity is a measure of how much the
ground shook at any particular place during an EQ. Each EQ can have several
intensities. It depends on magnitude, distance from epicenter, and type of rock or
sediment occuring where the measurement is made.


c) (4 pts) Following is the list of possible building locations. Please list the specific seismic
hazards (if any) that exist at each location with respect to the San Andreas and related faults along
the Central Coast of California.

In downtown Santa Cruz, equidistant between PergalesiÕs and the Java House.

Danger of liquifaction and intensified shaking because of saturated sediments.


In the Santa Cruz Mountains, on a steep slope just above the reach of the summer fog.

Landslides, ground cracking, being close to the fault at a potentially dangerous time.


On the UC Santa Cruz campus, using the Great Meadow Quartzite as a foundation.

Pretty safe, on hard rock. Possible chimney damage from intense shaking.


On the westside, very near EmilyÕs Bakery and on the Highway 1 Terrace.

Pretty safe, reasonably hard rock just below thin vaneer of beach sands and
sediments. Broken chimneys common.

6. a) (4 pts) Note the steep cliffs along this river that has a meandering shape. Starting with the
deposition of sediments, what is the Earth history of this place?

Incised meander. River came first, then uplift and consequent erosion down into the
canyons.

b) (4 pts) This is a strangely symmetrical spot. Starting with the deposition of sediments, what is
the Earth history of this spot, and what is this structure called?

After deposition, the lithification turned the sediments into rocks. Compressional
stresses occurred and these rocks deformed ductily, or folded. This is an antilcine.
Last, uplift and erosion.


c) (4 pts) Never mind the rock types here, but why is this valley so U-shaped? What happened
here?

A glacier carved this U-shaped valley.


d) (4 pts) Note the stepped regions of flat topography above the coast. What are these called? How
do they form? Is this an emergent or submergent coastline? To what present-day feature -- of
which nice examples occur at Natural Bridges -- can these be related?

These are terraces. They can be related to wave-cut platforms -- flat areas at sea level
cut by the waves. Terraces form on emergent coastlines as the wave-cut platforms are
uplifted above sealevel.

e) (4 pts) What is this linear feature? If it is a fault, specifically what kind is it and which way is the
offset.

This is a right-lateral strike-slip fault. It is also a beautiful example of an offset stream.