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Environmental Geology
Application of geologic principles and techniques to entire spectrum of interactions between people and the environment.
Geohazard
Geologic phenomenon representing common risk to life and property.
Carrying capacity
The largest population that an area can support.
Population growth rate
The birth rate of a population minus the death rate
Doubling time
The number of years needed to double a population, assuming a constant rate of natural increase.
Lithosphere
Earth's solid, rocky outer layer (Pedosphere= Young part of the lithosphere)
Hydrosphere
All of Earth's water. (Cryosphere=Ice)
Atmosphere
A mixture of gases that surrounds a planet, such as Earth.
Biosphere
All life forms on Earth. (Anthrosphere= Humans)
Cycle
A series of events that happen over and over again.
Rock Cycle
a repeated series of events by which rock gradually and continually changes between igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic forms
Hydrologic Cycle
The cycle through which water in the hydrosphere moves; includes such processes as evaporation, precipitation, and surface and groundwater runoff.`
Tectonic Cycle
the cyclic production and destruction of lithosphere through slow movement of tectonic plates.
Zero population growth
when the birth rate equals the death rate.
J-curve
a growth curve that depicts exponential growth.
Limiting resources
any environmental resource that, because it is scarce or at unfavorable levels, restricts the ecological niche of an organism.
Sustainability
Develop or use of resources in such a way that future generations can have a fair share of Earth's resources and inherit a quality environment.
Earth Systems Science
The study of Earth systems and the systems in space, An emerging science of earth as a complete entity (physical, chemical, biological, planetary change, etc.) -Spear- Headed by NASA. -Broader view than traditional Earth Science. -Geology: "process-response oriented" science; provides …
Global change
The changes produced in the Earth system as a result of human activities.
Global Warming
An increase in the average temperature of the earth's atmosphere (especially a sustained increase that causes climatic changes).
Greenhouse effect
Process by which atmospheric gases trap heat close to Earth's surface and prevent it from escaping into space.
Open/closed system
An open system is susceptible to outside influences. A closed system, on the other hand, is not.
Threshold effect
Systems resist change until overwhelmed, followed by sudden change.
Oligotrophic
a condition of a lake or other body of water characterized by low nutrients, low productivity, and high oxygen levels in the water column.
Uniformitarianism
Processes active today have been active throughout geologic time, but magnitude and frequency of processes are subject to natural and artificial change (including rate). -Paraphrased as "present is key to past." (unless evidence suggests otherwise.)
Magitude
the amount of energy released by the earthquake.
Frequency
How often a piece of data occurs.
Frequency - Magnitude concept
Inverse Relationships between frequency of event and magnitude of event.
Feedback
Condition where the output of system is also imput to the same system.
Positive feedback
(Vicious Cycle) outcome of one event change amplifies next event.
Negative feedback
outcome of one change decreases process for next event, eventually approaching "steady state." (Never fully reached)
Fault
A fracture on which one body of rock slides past another.
Earthquake
The shaking that results from the movement of rock beneath Earth's surface.
Stress
The push, pull, or shear that a material feels when subjected to a force; formally, the force applied per unit area over which the force acts.
Strain
The change in shape of an object in response to deformation (i.e., as a result of the application of a stress).
Focus
Point at the depth where the rocks ruptured to produce earthquakes; place where quake waves originate
Hypocenter
it is also known as focus. It is the actual location or starting point of an eathqeake underground.
P and S waves
P waves travel faster and through any kind of material; S waves are slower and travel only through solids. P-Push and pull motion. S- Up and down motion.
Surface waves
seismic waves that travel along the Earth's surface
Epicenter
Point on Earth's surface directly above the focus of an earthquake
Siesmograph
the instrument that detects, measures, and records the energy of earthquake vibrations
Siesmogram
a tracing of earthquake motion that is created by a seismograph
Resonance
A vibration of large amplitude produced by a relatively small vibration near the same frequency of vibration as the natural frequency of the resonating system
Liquifaction
Occurs when wet soil acts more like a liquid during an earthquake
Tsunami
A huge destructive wave (especially one caused by an earthquake)
Paleoseismology
The study of prehistoric earthquakes.
Seiche
Rhythmic movement in a body of water caused by ground motion.
Pahoehoe
A lava flow with a surface texture of smooth, glassy, rope-like ridges.
Aa
A lava flow with a rubbly surface
Lahar
A thick slurry formed when volcanic ash and debris mix with water, either in rivers or from rain or melting snow and ice on the flank of a volcano.
Nuee Ardente
Pyroclastic flow
Maar
A maar is a broad, low-relief volcanic crater that is caused by a phreatomagmatic eruption, which is an explosion caused by groundwater coming into contact with hot lava or magma.
Tephra
Unconsolidated accumulations of pyroclastic grains.
Pyroclastic
Fragmented material that sprayed out of a volcano and landed on the ground or sea floor in solid form.
Plinian Eruption
also known as Vesuvian eruptions, are volcanic eruptions marked by their similarity to the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. Plinian eruptions are marked by columns of gas and volcanic ash extending high into the stratosphere, a high layer of the atmosphere.
Lava Dome
A dome-like mass of rhyolitic lava that accumulates above the eruption vent.
Outgassing
the release of a gas that was dissolved, trapped, frozen or absorbed in some material.
Mafic
A term used in reference to magmas or igneous rocks that arc relatively poor in silica and rich in iron and magnesium.
Felsic
An adjective used in reference to igneous rocks that arc rich in elements forming feldspar and quartz.
Caldera
A large circular depression with steep walls and a fairly flat floor, formed after an eruption as the center of the volcano collapses into the drained magma chamber below.
Shield Volcano
A subaerial volcano with a broad, gentle dome, formed either from low-viscosity basaltic lava or from large pyroclastic sheets.
Fissure Flow
A conduit in a magma chamber in the shape of a long crack through which magma rises and erupts at the surface.
Stratovolcano
A large, cone-shaped subaerial voleano consisting of alter nating layers of lava and tephra.
Cinder cone
A subaerial volcano consisting of a cone-shaped pile of tephra whose slope approaches the angle of repose for tephra.
Palean Eruption
These eruptions result from the collapse of an andesitic or rhyolitic lava dome, with or without a directed blast, to produce glowing avalanches or nuée ardentes, as a type of pyroclastic flow known as a block-and-ash flow.
Icelandic eruption
The Icelandic type is characterized by effusions of molten basaltic lava that flow from long, parallel fissures. Such outpourings often build lava plateaus.

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