Cross-cutting relationships
Image:Cross-cutting relations.svg|thumb|350px|Cross-cutting relationships can be used to determine the relative ages of rock strata and other structures. Explanations: A – folded rock strata cut by a thrust fault; B – large intrusion ; C – erosional angular unconformity on which rock strata were deposited; D – volcanic dike ; E – even younger rock strata ; F – normal fault.
Cross-cutting relationships is a principle of geology that states that the geologic feature which cuts another is the younger of the two features. It is a relative dating technique in geology. It was first developed by Danish geological pioneer Nicholas Steno in Dissertationis prodromus and later formulated by James Hutton in Theory of the Earth and embellished upon by Charles Lyell in Principles of Geology.
Types
There are several basic types of cross-cutting relationships:- Structural relationships may be faults or fractures cutting through an older rock.
- Intrusional relationships occur when an igneous pluton or dike is intruded into pre-existing rocks.
- Stratigraphic relationships may be an erosional surface cuts across older rock layers, geological structures, or other geological features.
- Sedimentological relationships occur where currents have eroded or scoured older sediment in a local area to produce, for example, a channel filled with sand.
- Paleontological relationships occur where the animal activity or plant growth produces truncation. This happens, for example, when animal burrows penetrate into pre-existing sedimentary deposits.
- Geomorphological relationships may occur where a surficial feature, such as a river, flows through a gap in a ridge of rock. In a similar example, an impact crater excavates into a subsurface layer of rock.