Rock rich in silicon and aluminum forming the upper layer of the earth's crust beneath all continental landmasses.
[SI(LICON) + AL(UMINUM).]
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si·al (sī'ăl') ![]() |
[SI(LICON) + AL(UMINUM).]
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| Chemistry Dictionary: sial |
The rocks that form the earth's continental crust. These are granite rock types rich in silica (SiO2) and aluminium (Al), hence the name. Compare sima.
| Geography Dictionary: sial |
The continental crust, dominated by minerals rich in silica and aluminium.
| WordNet: sial |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
the granite-like rocks that form the outermost layer of the earth's crust; rich in silicon and aluminum
| Wikipedia: Sial |
In geology, the sial is the upper layer of the Earth's crust made of rocks rich in silicates and aluminium minerals. It is sometimes equated with the continental crust because it is absent in the wide oceanic basins, but "sial" is a geochemical term rather than a plate tectonic term.
Geologists often refer to the rocks in this layer as felsic, because they contain high levels of feldspar, an aluminium silicate mineral series. However, the sial "actually has quite a diversity of rock types, including large amounts of basaltic rocks."[1]
The name 'sial' was taken from the first two letters of silica and of aluminium. The sial is often contrasted to the 'sima,' the next lower layer in the Earth, which is often exposed in the ocean basins; and the nife, the nickel-iron core. These divisions of the Earth's interior (with these names) were first proposed by Eduard Suess in the 1800s. This model of the outer layers of the earth has been confirmed by petrographic, gravimetric, and seismic evidence.[2]
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The sial has a lower density (2700 - 2800 kg/m3) than the simasex, which is primarily due to increased amounts of aluminium, and decreased amounts of iron and magnesium. The base of the sial is not a strict boundary, the sial grades into the denser rocks of the sima. The Conrad discontinuity has been proposed as the boundary, but little is known about it, and it doesn't seem to match the point of geochemical change.[3] Instead, the boundary has been arbitrarily set at a mean density of 2800 kg/m3.[1]
Because of the large pressures, over geologic time, the sima flows like a very viscous liquid, so, in a real sense, the sial floats on the sima, in isostatic equilibrium.[4] Mountains extend down as well as up, much like icebergs on the ocean;[4] so that on the continental plates the sial runs between 5 km and 70 km deep.[5]
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| oceanization (geology) | |
| crust | |
| sima |
| How are sial and sima different? Read answer... | |
| Why is the sima layer found beneath the sial layer? Read answer... |
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