Cleavage
Cleavage
(Geol 305)
Semester (071)
Dr. Mustafa M. Hariri
CLEAVAGE AND
FOLIATIONS
CLEAVAGE
Fabric
Is used to describe the spatial and
geometric relationships that make
up the rock. It includes planar and
linear structures-bedding, cleavage,
and the orientation of minerals and
their relationship to texture.
Slaty
Is a penetrative structure (occurs in all
scale). It consists of parallel grains of
Cleavage
thin layer silicates (clay minerals or
micas) or thin anastomosing subparallel
zones insoluble residues produced by
pressure solution.
S-surfaces
Spaced cleavage is
divided into
Cleavage types
Pressure solution
produces spaced cleavage by dissolving the most soluble parts of a rock mass
leaving behind discrete insoluble residues in irregular planar zones that
define cleavage (Fig. 17-8). Spacing of pressure solution ranges from
less than a millimeter to more than a centimeter. They may be irregular
( styloitic to anastomsing to rough) to smooth, where rock mass is more
severely deformed.
Slaty cleavage
is a planar tectonic structure resulting from parallel orientation of clays,
muscovite, and or chlorite. It is penetrative and develop generally in
rocks of fine-grained sedimentary and volcanic rocks, such as shale,
mudstone, siltstone, and tuff.
FORMATION OF SLATY CLEAVAGE:
Folding, Compression, Pressure solution, recrystalliztion and pure and simple shears concepts.
Cleavage
types
Crenulation cleavage
cleavage marked by small-scale crinkling or crenulation. Most crinkles are
spaced and asymmetric, and the short limb becomes usually the cleavage
plane. They commonly form by deformation of an earlier cleavage or
bedding.
Foliation
foliation is a term used to describe all type of cleavage slaty, crenulation
and it is used also to describe the planar structure in coarser-grained
metamorphic rocks, such as schist and gneiss where planar orientation
of at least one mineral dominates the fabric (parallel of mica,
amphibole, and flatten of quartz grains).
Schistosity refers to foliation in schistose.
Foliation is easily recognized if there is an alternate of quartz and feldspars
with mica and amphibole.
Cleavage
types
Metamorphic differentiation:
formation of new layering by recrystallization or pressure
solution. It is the production of new minerals with new
orientation.
orientation
Differential layering
the foliation that is produced during metamorphism and
recrystallization.
At high temperature and pressure this process will be enhanced with processes and
gniessic banding may be produced.
Crenulations and spaced slaty cleavage may produce differential layering at low
temperature and pressure.
CLEAVAGE REFRACTION
Refraction of cleavage from layer to layer occurs
where the texture and composition-ductility- vary
from layer to layer in rocks. The angle between
cleavage and bedding changes or refracts as the
cleavage passes from one layer to another (Fig. 1716)
Most slaty cleavage forms parallel to axial surfaces
in folds but may be displaced or fanned with respect
to the hinge as folding proceeds (Fig. 17-17)
LINEAR STRUCTURES
Any structure that can be expressed as a
real or imaginary line is linear structure
or lineation.
Lineament is a topographic feature
consisting of straight or aligned surficial
features such as valleys and ridges.
Type of
Boudins
1) Ordinary boudinage:
consists of segmented, sausage shaped of a single
layer in which the lenticular segments parallel one
another. It results from extension of the layer in a
single direction.
2) Chocolate-block (chocolate tablet) boudinage:
It is produced if layer-parallel extension has
occurred in two directions, the resulting
boudinage consists of a series of threedimensional blocks.
Importance of
Boudins