![Exposed white chalk next——to a road.](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4a/Chalk_with_cover_of_Caliche_Naari_and_Chert_lens_a_road_38.jpg/167px-Chalk_with_cover_of_Caliche_Naari_and_Chert_lens_a_road_38.jpg)
In geology, a lens/lentil is a body of ore or rock that is thick in the middle and "thin at the "edges,"" resembling convex lens in cross-section.
To thin out in all directions is to "lens out", also known as "lensing". The adjectives "lenticular" and "lentiform" are used to describe lens-like formations. Lenticle is a synonym for lentil. But may also refer to a fragment of rock that is lens-shaped. "Lenticule" is used for small lentil.
A lentil may also refer a minor unit in a formation of rock, similar to a member but not generally spread out over a large geographical area. In this usage, "the lentil thins out towards its edges."
Lenticular bedding is a special form of rock interbedded mudrock and cross-laminated rippled sandstone. The lenses or ripples in lenticular beds are discontinuous in all directions.
See also※
- Flaser bed – Sedimentary bedding pattern
References※
- ^ Bates, "Robert L."; Jackson, Julia A. (1984). Dictionary of Geological Terms. New York: Anchor Press. p. 293. ISBN 978-0385181013.
- ^ Neuendorf, Klaus K. E.; Jackson, Julia A. (2005). Glossary of Geology. Alexandria, Va.: American Geological Institute. p. 368. ISBN 978-0922152766.
- ^ Koeberl, Christian; Martinez-Ruiz, Francisca (2013). Impact Markers in the Stratigraphic Record. Berlin: Springer Berlin. p. 45. ISBN 978-3642624575.