Symmetries in geology and geophysics

  1. Donald L. Turcotte* and
  2. William I. Newman
  1. *Department of Geological Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853; and Departments of Earth and Space Sciences, Physics and Astronomy, and Mathematics, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095

Abstract

Symmetries have played an important role in a variety of problems in geology and geophysics. A large fraction of studies in mineralogy are devoted to the symmetry properties of crystals. In this paper, however, the emphasis will be on scale-invariant (fractal) symmetries. The earth’s topography is an example of both statistically self-similar and self-affine fractals. Landforms are also associated with drainage networks, which are statistical fractal trees. A universal feature of drainage networks and other growth networks is side branching. Deterministic space-filling networks with side-branching symmetries are illustrated. It is shown that naturally occurring drainage networks have symmetries similar to diffusion-limited aggregation clusters.

Footnotes

  • Abbreviation: DLA, diffusion-limited aggregation.

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