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Orientation tensor

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Ingeology,especially in the study ofglacial till,eigenvectorsandeigenvaluesare used as a method by which a mass of information of a clastfabric's constituents' orientation and dip can be summarized in a 3-D space by six numbers. In the field, a geologist may collect such data for hundreds or thousands ofclastsin asoil sample,which can only be compared graphically such as in a Tri-Plot (Sneed and Folk) diagram,[1][2]or as astereographic projection.[3]The output for theorientation tensoris in the three orthogonal (perpendicular) axes of space.

Eigenvectors output from programs such as Stereo32[4]are in the order E1 > E2 > E3, with E1 being the primary orientation of clast orientation/dip, E2 being the secondary and E3 being the tertiary, in terms of strength. The clast orientation is defined as the Eigenvector, on a compass rose of 360°. Dip is measured as the Eigenvalue, the modulus of the tensor: this is valued from 0° (no dip) to 90° (vertical). Various values of E1, E2 and E3 mean different things, as can be seen in the book 'A Practical Guide to the Study of Glacial Sediments' by Benn & Evans, 2004.[5]

References

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  1. ^Graham, D., and Midgley, N., 2000.Earth Surface Processes and Landforms(25) pp 1473–1477
  2. ^Sneed, ED; Folk, RL (1958). "Pebbles in the lower Colorado River, Texas, a study of particle morphogenesis".Journal of Geology.66(2): 114–150.Bibcode:1958JG.....66..114S.doi:10.1086/626490.
  3. ^Knox-Robinson, Carl M; Gardoll, Stephen J (1998). "GIS-stereoplot: an interactive stereonet plotting module for ArcView 3.0 geographic information system".Computers & Geosciences.24:243–250.Bibcode:1998CG.....24..243K.doi:10.1016/S0098-3004(97)00122-2.
  4. ^Stereo32
  5. ^Benn, D., Evans, D., 2004. A Practical Guide to the study of Glacial Sediments. London: Arnold. pp 103–107