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Superposition

Superposition. Road Cuts Rock Outcrops. Boulder, Co. – Boulder, Colorado. Adams, Co. – Peebles, Ohio. Compare and Contrast the two pictures. . Source Rock (granite in this case.). Quartz. Biotite Mica. Feldspars. Granite can be weathered and eroded and the crystals of the

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Superposition

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  1. Superposition

  2. Road Cuts Rock Outcrops Boulder, Co. – Boulder, Colorado Adams, Co. – Peebles, Ohio Compare and Contrast the two pictures.

  3. Source Rock (granite in this case.) Quartz Biotite Mica Feldspars

  4. Granite can be weathered and eroded and the crystals of the minerals making it will become smaller pieces. Quartz is the hardest and will usually be found in larger pieces than either mica or feldspar. Quartz is often found as the main component of soil in beach and desert environments. Granite is an igneous rock composed of three minerals, mica, feldspar and quartz. Pictured below are the three minerals: Black Sand beach formed from dark volcanic matter. White Sand beach could be formed from quartz or even pieces of shells.

  5. Student Work Example – The test over this material included having students create a diagram to explain where each type of rock could form.

  6. Activity – 10 minutes Looking at the Present to Interpret the Past. • Look at the cross-section map of the Edge of Appalachia Preserve. • Starting at the bottom, give the conditions under which each rock layer formed. • Number the layers from oldest to youngest. • Indicate if the rock is composed from a biotic (non-clastic) or an abiotic (clastic) source. • Indicate the type of vegetation on each layer and come up with a hypothesis why certain plants grow over certain rock layers.

  7. Drawing for Activity - Looking at what is present and interpreting the past. Chris Bedel, Cincinnati Museum Center – Used by Permission

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