Everything about Core Sample totally explained
A
core sample is a cylindrical section of a naturally occurring medium consistent enough to hold a layered structure.
In most cases cores are obtained by drilling into the medium with a hollow
steel tube called a corer. The hole made for the core sample is called a core hole. A variety of corers exist to sample different media under different conditions. More continue to be invented. In the
coring process the sample is pushed more or less intact into the tube. Removed from the tube in the laboratory, it's inspected and analyzed by different techniques and equipment depending on the type of data desired. Analysis is generally non-destructive of most of the sample.
Methods
- gravity coring, in which the core sampler is dropped into the sample
- drilling
- vibracoring, in which the sampler is vibrated to allow penetration into thixotropic media.
Management of cores and data
The technique of coring long predates attempts to drill into the
Earth’s
mantle by the
Deep Sea Drilling Program. The value to oceanic and other
geologic history of obtaining cores over a wide area of
sea floors soon became apparent. Core sampling by many scientific and exploratory organizations expanded rapidly. To date hundreds of thousands of core samples have been collected from floors of all the planet’s
oceans and many of its
inland waters.
Access to many of these samples is facilitated by the
Index to Marine & Lacustrine Geological Samples,
» "A collaboration between twenty institutions and agencies that operate geological repositories."
The above agency keeps a record of the samples held in the repositories of its member organizations. Data includes
» "
Lithography,
texture, age, principal investigator,
province,
weathering/
metamorphism,
glass remarks and descriptive comments"
Layering
Any natural medium at or under the
Earth’s surface that's consistent enough to maintain a
solid or
semi-solid structure is layered. The layering comes from successive
deposition or growth in time of structural or compositional variants of the medium.
Most familiar to us are the layers of the Earth’s surface on which the geologic history of the surface is based; for example, the
Eocene,
Oligocene,
Miocene, etc. Each layer in this case contains distinctive
fossils generated by the
evolution of species. Layers often are divided into sublayers.
Layering is more pervasive than the broad outline of the
Geologic Time Scale leads us to believe. Any change in environment causes a new layer to be deposited. A succession of plant species in a region, for example, causes a succession of layers containing different
pollen in ice and mud. Variation in rainfall causes
tree rings to be of different widths.
Informational value of core samples
Scientific coring began as a method of sampling the ocean floor. It soon expanded to
lakes,
ice,
mud,
soil and
wood. Cores on very old
trees give information about their growth rings without destroying the tree.
Cores indicate variations of
climate,
species and
sedimentary composition during geologic history. The dynamic phenomena of the Earth’s surface are for the most part cyclical in a number of ways, especially
temperature and
rainfall.
There are many ways to date a core. Once dated, it gives valuable information about changes of climate and
terrain. For example, cores in the ocean floor, soil and ice have altered the view of the geologic history of the
Pleistocene entirely.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Core Sample'.
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