| tabular intrusions |
Sheet intrusions that are planar and of roughly uniform thickness. |
 |
| Taconic orogeny |
A convergent mountain-building event that took place around 400 million years ago, in which a volcanic island arc collided with eastern North America. |
 |
| tailings pile |
A pile of waste rock from a mine. |
 |
| talus |
A sloping apron of fallen rock along the base of a cliff. |
 |
| tar |
Hydrocarbons that exist in solid form at room temperature. |
 |
| tar sand |
Sandstone reservoir rock in which less viscous oil and gas molecules have either escaped or been eaten by microbes, so that only tar remains. |
 |
| tarn |
A lake that forms at the base of a cirque on a glacially eroded mountain. |
 |
| taxonomy |
The study and classification of the relationships among different forms of life. |
 |
| tension |
A stress that pulls on a material and could lead to stretching. |
 |
| tephra |
Unconsolidated accumulations of pyroclastic grains. |
 |
| terminal moraine |
The end moraine at the farthest limit of glaciation. |
 |
| terminator |
The boundary between the half of the Earth that has daylight and the half experiencing night. |
 |
| terrace |
The elevated surface of an older floodplain into which a younger floodplain had cut down. |
 |
| terrestrial planets |
A term used to describe the inner, Earth-like planets. |
 |
| thalweg |
The deepest part of a stream’s channel. |
 |
| theory |
A scientific idea supported by an abundance of evidence that has passed many tests and failed none. |
 |
| theory of plate tectonics |
The theory that the outer layer of the Earth (the lithosphere) consists of separate plates that move with respect to one another. |
 |
| thermal (or contact) metamorphism |
Metamorphism caused by heat conducted into country rock from an igneous intrusion. |
 |
| thermocline |
A boundary between layers of water with differing temperatures. |
 |
| thermohaline circulation |
The rising and sinking of water driven by contrasts in water density, which is due in turn to differences in temperature and salinity; this circulation involves both surface and deep-water currents in the ocean. |
 |
| thermosphere |
The outermost layer of the atmosphere containing very little gas. |
 |
| thin section |
A 3/100-mm-thick slice of rock that can be examined with a petrographic microscope. |
 |
| thin-skinned deformation |
A distinctive style of deformation characterized by displacement on faults that terminate at depth along a subhorizontal detachment fault. |
 |
| thrust fault |
A gently dipping reverse fault; the hanging-wall block moves up the slope of the fault. |
 |
| tidal bore |
A visible wall of water that moves toward shore with the rising tide in quiet waters. |
 |
| tidal flat |
A broad, nearly horizontal plain of mud and silt, exposed or nearly exposed at low tide but totally submerged at high tide. |
 |
| tidal reach |
The difference in sea level between high tide and low tide at a given point. |
 |
| tide |
The daily rising or falling of sea level at a given point on the Earth. |
 |
| tide-generating force |
The force, caused in part by the gravitational attraction of the Sun and Moon, and in part by the centrifugal force created by the Earth’s spin, that generates tides. |
 |
| till |
A mixture of unsorted mud, sand, pebbles, and larger rocks deposited by glaciers. |
 |
| tillite |
A rock formed from hardened ancient glacial deposits and consisting of larger clasts distributed through a matrix of sandstone and mudstone. |
 |
| toe (terminus) |
The leading edge or margin of a glacier. |
 |
| tombolo |
A narrow ridge of sand that links a sea stack to the mainland. |
 |
| topographical map |
A map that uses contour lines to represent variations in elevation. |
 |
| topography |
Variations in elevation. |
 |
| topsoil |
The top soil horizons, which are typically dark and |
 |
| tornado |
A near-vertical, funnel-shaped cloud in which air rotates extremely rapidly around the axis of the funnel. |
 |
| tornado swarm |
Dozens of tornadoes produced by the same storm. |
 |
| tower karst |
A karst landscape in which steep-sided residual bedrock towers remain between sinkholes. |
 |
| transform fault |
A fault marking a transform plate boundary; along mid-ocean ridges, transform faults are the actively slipping segment of a fracture zone between two ridge segments. |
 |
| transform plate boundary |
A boundary at which one lithosphere plate slips laterally past another. |
 |
| transgression |
The inland migration of shoreline resulting from a rise in sea level. |
 |
| transition zone |
The middle portion of the mantle, from 400 to 670 km deep, in which there are several jumps in seismic velocity. |
 |
| transpiration |
The release of moisture as a metabolic byproduct. |
 |
| transverse dune |
A simple, wave-like dune that appears when enough sand accumulates for the ground surface to be completely buried, but only moderate winds blow. |
 |
| travel-time curve |
A graph that plots the time since an earthquake began on the vertical axis, and the distance to the epicenter on the horizontal axis. |
 |
| trellis network |
A drainage system that develops across a landscape of parallel valleys and ridges so that major tributaries flow down the valleys and join a trunk stream that cuts through the ridge; the resulting map pattern resembles a garden trellis. |
 |
| trench |
A deep elongate trough bordering a volcanic arc; a trench defines the trace of a convergent plate boundary. |
 |
| triangulation |
The method for determining the map location of a point from knowing the distance between that point and three other points; this method is used to locate earthquake epicenters. |
 |
| tributary |
A smaller stream that flows into a larger stream. |
 |
| triple junction |
A point where three lithosphere plate boundaries intersect. |
 |
| tropical depression |
A tropical storm with winds reaching up to 61 km per hour; such storms develop from tropical disturbances, and may grow to become hurricanes. |
 |
| tropical disturbance |
Cyclonic winds that develop in the tropics. |
 |
| tropopause |
The temperature pause marking the top of the troposphere. |
 |
| troposphere |
The lowest layer of the atmosphere, where air undergoes convection and where most wind and clouds develop. |
 |
| truncated spur |
A spur (elongate ridge between two valleys) whose end was eroded off by a glacier. |
 |
| trunk stream |
The single larger stream into which an array of tributaries flow. |
 |
| tsunami |
A large wave along the sea surface triggered by an earthquake or large submarine slump. |
 |
| tuff |
A pyroclastic igneous rock composed of volcanic ash and fragmented pumice, formed when accumulations of the debris cement together. |
 |
| tundra |
A cold, treeless region of land at high latitudes, supporting only species of shrubs, moss, and lichen capable of living on permafrost. |
 |
| turbidite |
A graded bed of sediment built up at the base of a submarine slope and deposited by turbidity currents. |
 |
| turbidity current |
A submarine avalanche of sediment and water that speeds down a submarine slope. |
 |
| turbulence |
The chaotic twisting, swirling motion in flowing fluid. |
 |
| typhoon |
The equivalent of a hurricane in the western Pacific Ocean. |