Geology is WAY More than Rocks!

Planetary Structure Rocks!

What science lets you look at a landscape and see its past? Why, geology, of course. Strictly speaking, geology is the study of Earth’s structures, rocks, and the way they form and change over time. However, the principles of understanding our planet that you learn when you study geology also come in handy when looking at other worlds. So, the earth science we learn in school gives us insight across time and solar system space.

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A desktop collection of rocks from around the world. (Pay no attention to the aliens and bear. They were gifts from fellow planetarians over the years.) Photo by TheSpacewriter.

I used to collect rocks as a kid. My first collection disappeared during a move, but that didn’t stop me from picking up more. These days, I have a small collection gathered from my travels from nearly every continent (except Antarctica). Each one has a tale to tell about its origins.

Rock crystal structures fascinated me, which is why I started picking them up in the first place. I noticed pretty quickly the many different shapes and structures in rocks. In 8th grade, we studied geology, which meant taking field trips. Around where I grew up, we were taught early on that millions of years ago, our region had been an ocean environment. Sometimes it was under deep water, and then, as the waters receded, the region was laced with shorelines and marshy areas. Over time, the plant and animal life was buried, and that created coal and natural gas. If you drive along the Front Range of Colorado (say from Pueblo to Cheyenne), it appears as a vast undulating plains area. In my mind’s eye, I can almost see the ocean that used to be there, long before the current Rocky Mountains formed and deformed the nearby landscapes.

A Short History of Colorado Geology

Colorado has been in the making since nearly the formation of our planet. It was once part of the massive continent of Pangaea. It moved around the planet as the plates underlying Pangaea shifted. Colorado’s “basement” rocks date back to that early period. The current Rockies, which are a very recent addition, didn’t even form until after the proto-North American continent had started to take shape.

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Dinosaur Ridge near Denver, CO, along I-70. This set of layered rocks tells a geological story about the state. Courtesy J Stuby, Wikimedia Commons.

The story of the landscape I live in exists in the rocks. Those that we see in the Rockies are an open geology book. From Boulder and Denver west, you can drive through broken shards of sandstone, mudstone, and shales, many laid down during the times when this area was part of a great ocean and waterway system. In fact, I-70 cuts through a series of uplifted layers that document those millions of years in geologic time. Very quickly, however, you get to the rocks that flowed once as lava or were heated and cooked by lava to become metamorphic rocks. The central Rockies are made largely of these types of rock.

Then, on the western slope, we get back to the layered sedimentary rocks from the ancient oceans that deposited sediments starting some 500 million years ago. The topmost layers are the youngest and date successively back to the Cretaceous oceans. They eventually drained away as the current Rocky Mountains rose in response to an event called the Laramide Orogeny. It was a period of mountain-building that helped create the Rockies and the larger outlines of the Colorado Plateau. Today I sit on a peak born during that event.

Everybody’s Geology

Your own home region has a geologic past that you can look up and learn from if you wish to understand why it looks the way it does. Mountains, plains, river valleys, islands, you name it, they all have their roots in geologic processes. When I travel cross-country, I often think about what stories the rocks in the flyover states could tell. Or the tales the Appalachians could share. Or the millennia-long legends the rocks of the Himalayas or the Alps could relate.

Applied Geology on Other Planets

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Rocks tell a story of water and wind on Mars. This panorama is a mosaic of images taken by the Mast Camera (Mastcam) on the NASA Mars rover Curiosity while the rover was working at a site called “Rocknest” in October and November 2012. Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech. Click to enlarge.

The geology of other worlds has another name: planetary geology or planetary science. It lets us apply what we know about how Earth’s geology occurred to explain what we see elsewhere. Mars is a great example of this and we can read its rock record. It has regions that look like riverbeds, lake shore lines, and peaks. Many of the processes that laid down sedimentary rocks here on Earth are (or were) at work on Mars. Clearly, water did some of the work. But, the wind has done so, too, just as it does here at home. We have a few craters on Earth that formed as space rocks slammed into the surface. Mars does, too. As do the Moon, Mercury, Venus, some asteroids, and the icy worlds of the outer solar system. Even distant Pluto has a geological story to tell!

For the rocky worlds (the “terrestrials”) the story really IS in the rocks. Just as on Earth, when I can pick up a rock from the road by my house and understand its story, someday, people will do the same on Mars. The minerals and crystals all have a tale to tell, and it’s one that has been millions or billions of years in the making. That is why I like geology. It uses science to explain the world we live on and the other places in the solar system.

The Age of the Spaceplane is Coming

I’ve always been a sucker for spaceplanes. The idea of taking off in a sleek aircraft, heading to space, and then using it to come back for a smooth landing was once so science-fictiony. I loved it! It’s what many of us hoped the age of the space shuttles would bring to space flight. To a large extent, they did bring the dream alive beginning in 1981. When the shuttle program ended in 2011, we all looked around for a viable replacement. Today, NASA is counting on Apollo-style capsules on rockets to get people and goods to space. That’s all fine and good, but a good spaceplane is needed. As it turns out, one is on the horizon.

The Dream Chaser Spaceplane

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Sierra Nevada Corporation’s Dream Chaser spaceplane, compared to a space shuttle. Artist’s concept courtesy SNC.

Enter the Dream Chaser. It’s a sleek little reusable shuttle about a quarter the size of the space shuttle, but the ability to carry cargo and/or up to seven astronauts to space. It’s been under development by the Sierra Nevada Corporation since the early 2000s. Dream Chaser’s history is much older and derives from ideas and designs dating back to the dawn of the space age.

The X-20 Dyna-Soar was first spaceplane-style design, dating back to the late 1950s. Other ideas for such a plane were developed by Northrup with its M2-F2 and the Martin company’s PRIME aircraft. The most direct ancestor of the Dream Chaser was NASA’s HL-20 aircraft, which dates back to the early 1990s. Its DNA also includes some ideas from the Russian/Soviet MiG-105 military aircraft.

Sierra Nevada’s Dream Chaser (there’s been more than one aircraft with that name) is on target to become part of NASA’s Commercial Crew development program. It already has commitments from the European Space Agency for its use in space. Once certified, Dream Chaser will be able to carry people and cargo to the International Space Station, or other targets in near-Earth orbit. I had a chance to see a mockup of this neat little spaceplane a year or so back at a local space event.  For me, it brings back the excitement of the space shuttles, but with 21st-century technology built in.

Testing, Testing, Testing…

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Dream Chaser at the end of a flight test; testing will continue through 2017 into 2018. Courtesy SNC.

Before Dream Chaser can go to space on a regular basis, it needs testing. With its awarded contracts to take people and cargo to space, the plane is undergoing aerodynamic and flight testing. Models are set up at NASA Langley’s wind tunnels and it has already done one round of flight tests. More are on the horizon through the rest of this year and into 2018. If all goes well (and so far, it looks good), the Dream Chaser will enter service for NASA in 2019.

Personally, I can’t wait to see this little spaceplane soar into space atop a rocket such as the Atlas V, Falcon Heavy, or an Ariane 5. Future missions could include a servicing visit to Hubble Space Telescope (although whether that will happen is open to debate). The UN has bought time on the spaceplane to give space to nations without launch capability. And, of course, the aforementioned cargo deliveries to the ISS and other stations are prime missions.

Dream Chaser’s parent company has been exploring the idea and possibilities of landing the spaceplane at public airports. Since its systems will not require special handling, it’s entirely possible that someday, we’ll watch a spaceplane come back to regular airports as needed. That may seem a bit far-fetched now, but as such things as space tourism develop further, landing people back near their home ports may be entirely possible. Until then, Dream Chaser is one of several vehicles (in addition to Spaceship 2 and balloon-borne craft) to watch as the U.S. moves forward into the third decade of 21st Century space exploration.