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      Evolving fracture patterns: columnar joints, mud cracks, and polygonal terrain

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          Abstract

          When cracks form in a thin contracting layer, they sequentially break the layer into smaller and smaller pieces. A rectilinear crack pattern encodes information about the order of crack formation, as later cracks tend to intersect with earlier cracks at right angles. In a hexagonal pattern, in contrast, the angles between all cracks at a vertex are near 120\(^\circ\). However, hexagonal crack patterns are typically only seen when a crack network opens and heals repeatedly, in a thin layer, or advances by many intermittent steps into a thick layer. Here it is shown how both types of pattern can arise from identical forces, and how a rectilinear crack pattern evolves towards a hexagonal one. Such an evolution is expected when cracks undergo many opening cycles, where the cracks in any cycle are guided by the positions of cracks in the previous cycle, but when they can slightly vary their position, and order of opening. The general features of this evolution are outlined, and compared to a review of the specific patterns of contraction cracks in dried mud, polygonal terrain, columnar joints, and eroding gypsum-sand cements

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          Most cited references39

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          Structures, textures, and cooling histories of Columbia River basalt flows

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            Cracking of thin bonded films in residual tension

            J.L. Beuth (1992)
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              Ice-Wedge Cracks, Garry Island, Northwest Territories

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                28 November 2012
                2013-06-13
                Article
                10.1098/rsta.2012.0353
                1211.6762
                73042e09-c577-41a8-95ca-33aea06bf7b8

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                Phil. Trans. R. Soc A, 371, 20120353 (2013)
                19 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A; theme issue on Geophysical Pattern Formation (to appear 2013)
                physics.geo-ph

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