Recognition, Interpretation, and Use of Mutually Perpendicular Lineations in Rocks

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
12
File Size:
1456 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1965

Abstract

Greater use should be made of lineations in investigations of the engineering properties of rock masses and in structural studies guiding prospecting programmes.A prominent alignment of elongate mineral grains and stretched pebbles usually marks the primary direction in which metamorphic rocks have been extended by flow. In local adjustment zones separating masses that have extended different amounts, this lineation has been a direction of slip. Kinks and crumples resulting from this slip lie in secondary lineation directions transverse to the primary mineral lineation.During deformation relatively mobile materials move into dilatant zones caused by irregularities in primary flow directions. This secondary movement transverse to lineated, primary-flow directions is the cause of crenulations and folds with axes parallel to flow lineations.INTRODUCTIONThe arrangement of inequidimensional particles in rocks is rarely statistically random. Platy minerals tend to be parallel to bedding and foliation planes. Elongate particles and linear structures lie most frequently in certain lineation directions. The types of elongate particles in lineated rocks include needle and blade shaped mineral grains, sheared out segregations, and stretched pebbles, amygdules, and aolites.Crenulations and kinks are the most common of the linear structures involved.Faint lineations are readily overlooked. Even strong lineations have been ignored. This is unfortunate as even weak lineations may be important.Use of lineation information Well-developed lineations influence the mechanical properties of rocks. Quarry workers have long known that the mechanical properties of rock masses vary directionally...
Citation

APA:  (1965)  Recognition, Interpretation, and Use of Mutually Perpendicular Lineations in Rocks

MLA: Recognition, Interpretation, and Use of Mutually Perpendicular Lineations in Rocks. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1965.

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