GLS100 Lab: Investigating the Geology of Forest River Park

GLS100 Physical Geology –Dr. Hanson

This field exercise will shed light on the origin of the topographic features observed on the Salem topographic map during the previous lab.

Goals: Students will develop a model of landform development based on field observations and data from the literature.

Objectives:

·  Interpret sequence of events by applying the laws of relative age dating

·  Identify features of glacial erosion and make interpretations regarding:

o  How they were formed

o  The indicated direction of glacial flow

o  The type of glacier that formed them

o  The time during glaciation that they were formed

·  Interpret rates and processes of Holocene weathering and erosion

Figure 1. Forest River Park.

Part I Relative Age-Dating Events

The purpose of this section is to identify events recorded in earth materials, the features that represent them, and their order of occurrence. We will apply three laws of relative age dating:

1.  Law of superposition

2.  Law of cross cutting relationships

3.  Law of inclusion

Stop 1: Small bedrock outcrop southeast of Parking Lot

Forest River Park is underlain by bedrock with a thin mantle of overburden (dirt). The outcrop seen here is just one of many exposed throughout the park.

a.  Place a small dot where we are located on figure 1.

b.  Is the sediment (regolith/overburden) younger or older that the outcrop? (circle one)

c.  State the law used: ______

d.  The area of this small exposure exhibits the following features:

i.  Glacial striations/grooves

ii.  A light colored felsic intrusion

iii.  Overburden/regolith

iv.  A dark-colored mafic intrusion

v.  An unconformity (buried erosional surface)

vi.  Joints (fractures)

Stop I Exercise:

1. In the table below order the features according to their relative age and hypothesize the event that created each. (1=oldest)

Age / Feature / Event Recorded
6.
5.
4.
3.
2.
1.

2. Determine the orientation of the glacial striations. ______

3. Using the symbols in figure 2 plot the striations on figure 1. The dot is drawn on the outcrop where the feature is located.

3. In the box below draw the outcrop and label the relative age of each feature. Include a north arrow and scale.

Introduction to local erosion and glaciation

Erosion is the removal of rock and weathered debris. Sediment created by weathering is removed by streams, waves, wind and glaciers and eventually deposited in the ocean. By removing rocks and sediment erosion removes evidence of past events. Geologists use the analogy of pages torn from a book. Each series of rocks tells a story, however when some rocks are missing our ability to interpret the story is incomplete. For this reason we are missing detailed information regarding what happened in the area between the time the rocks were formed and glaciation.

Surface water is the most effective agent of erosion. Over 90% of all sediment transported to the oceans is done so by streams. In the last 400 million fluvial activity has removed miles of rock and sediment from this region and the rest of the Appalachians.

More recently (within the last 2 million years) glaciers flowed across the area scouring and shaping the already deeply eroded landscape. The abundant exposed surfaces are a by-product of glaciation.

During the Pleistocene (Ice Age), glaciers advanced over New England at least twice. Beyond the glacial limit, south of Long Island, sandy flat coastal beaches rest on a cover of Late Mesozoic and Cenozoic coastal plain sediments. In New England glaciation stripped off these younger sediments and pushed then off onto the continental shelf. Preglacial sediments in Massachusetts are only found where they have been bulldozed by the ice margin and incorporated in the terminal moraine making up Martha’s Vineyard and Block Island. Locally glaciation modified the landscape by scouring basins and valleys in weak rock, modifying the shape of bedrock hills, and depositing glacial sediment.

NOTES:

______

Field Evidence: Making Observations

Geologists can observe trends and patterns on maps. However, to truly understand what is going on we need to study features in the field. Recall from the previous lab that numerous small orthogonal valleys, and asymmetrical hills with steep-facing southerly slopes characterize the Salem area. We are now going collect data (make observation) and develop some hypotheses to explain the observed topographic pattern.

Stop 2: Forest River Park and the large outcrop near swimming beach.

Study the area around Forest River Park and answer the following questions:

1.  Is the bedrock in the area shallow (<10 feet beneath the surface) or deep? How do you know?

2.  Is the topography control by the bedrock or the overlying sedimentary deposits? Explain.

3.  Locate the outcrop near the shore. Is there any evidence of glaciation here? Why?

4.  Note the small NW-SE trending valley cuts this outcrop. Why does this valley exist? Indicate the orientation of this feature with are heavy black line.

Move on to the next stop.

Stop 3. Large outcrop on southern shore

Introduction:

The Pleistocene Epoch (2 ma – 10 ka) of the Quaternary Period is known as the ice age. During this time the climate was cool enough for ice sheets to form and descend from Canada into New England. The glaciers scoured, polished, and quarried bedrock surfaces, and locally deposited glacial till and other sediments.

Observe the following features:

1.  What features do you see at the base of the large outcrop along the shore? Explain why the rock smooth.

2.  Measure the trend (______) of these features and plot on your map.

3.  Note the valley separating the two large outcrops. In which direction does it trend? Offer an explanation for the presence of the valley. Cite any observed evidence in support of your hypothesis. Mark the location and trend of this feature with a heavy dark line.

4.  Tide permitting, you will see a small asymmetrical knob on the low-tide terrace, this is a roche moutonnee. (See figure 1.) Draw a 2-D side-profile of it. Note the trend of the striations on its surface. In your illustration label the steep, plucked lee-side slope and the gentler abraded stoss slope, draw an arrow indicating the direction of ice flow. Explain how you were able to determine the flow directions.

Field sketch of Roche Moutonnee at Stop 3

Figure 3. Formation of a roche moutonnee beneath a glacier. These small asymmetrical bedrock knobs are formed by abrasion (up-ice side) and quarrying (down-ice side). Their presence tells is that 1) the glacier was warm-based, which means that it was riding on a thin layer of meltwater, and 2) the absolute direction of glacial flow.

5. Locate this feature and use the proper symbol (figure 2) showing the direction of glacial flow.

Questions:

1.  Was this feature formed by a warm-based or cold-based glacier? Cite your evidence.

2.  Do you think that this was formed when the glacier was advancing or retreating. Why?

3.  From your observation, which process results in the greatest amount of erosion, plucking or abrasion? Explain.

4.  Waves, wind, glaciers, and stream are all agents of erosion. What indication is there that glaciers were the last major agent of erosion to affect the area?

5.  Study the large outcrop leading up to the park. Explain what happens to the striations and rocks’ surface roughness as you move up the outcrop and why.

6.  Cite any evidence that the rocks in the outcrop do not weather at the same rate. Which weathers fastest the dark or light rock?

Bringing it all together:

7.  Recall the direction that the steep side of the roche moutonnee faces? Relate the topopgraphy observed on the Salem topographic map to the observed field evidence.

8.  What is the origin of the orthogonal valleys throughout the area? Why are those that trend NW-SE typically longer?

Summarize

In one or two clearly written paragraphs summarized, and post on the class wiki, what you learned about the topography of the area and the geologic processes that shaped it.

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