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SILICICLASTIC SEDIMENTARY ROCKS

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... mudstones do this because flat or platy grains are not aligned parallel to each ... fissile rocks owe their character to parallel alignment of platy grains. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SILICICLASTIC SEDIMENTARY ROCKS


1
SILICICLASTICSEDIMENTARY ROCKS
  • Prepared by Dr. F. Clark
  • Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences,
    University of Alberta
  • August 06

2
INTRODUCTION - TEXTURES
  • Just as with igneous rocks, the textures of
    siliciclastic sedimentary rocks are involved in
    their classification. As a first pass, the rock
    name depends on the grain size, but other aspects
    of texture, namely shape and arrangement, are
    factors in further refinement of the name. In
    gross terms, three grain sizes, namely 2 mm, 1/16
    (0.0625) mm, and 1/256 (0.0039) mm, divide
    grains, and thus siliciclastic sedimentary rocks,
    into four size classes. Those four size classes
    correspond to conglomerate, sandstone, siltstone,
    and claystone, in order from coarsest to finest
    grain sizes.

3
Conglo-merate.A significant proportion of grains
(some sources suggest over 30) is larger than 2
mm in diameter.
  • Loose sediment with this grain size
    characteristic is referred to as gravel. In the
    sample above, the larger gravel-sized grains
    yellow arrows constitute the framework, whereas
    the smaller, sand- and silt-sized grains
    constitute the matrix blue arrows.

4
Conglo-merate?Perhaps no more than 15 of the
grains exceed the 2 mm lower size limit most of
the grains are sand-sized.
  • This sample shows that the distinction between
    the size classes can be somewhat arbitrary. A
    subtle change in the current which produced the
    lamination green arrow in these finer gravels,
    and from which this sediment was deposited, could
    have resulted in all grains being sand purple
    arrows or gravel yellow arrows.

5
Conglomerate vs. Breccia
  • In more traditional usage, the term conglomerate
    applies to those rocks with rounded clasts
    (left), whereas those rocks with more angular
    grains (right) are referred to as breccia. The
    angularity of the grains on the right specimen is
    not pronounced, so the term breccia might not be
    appropriate in this case.

6
Conglomerate vs. Diamictite
  • In more current usage, the term conglomerate
    applies to those rocks that are grain-supported,
    such as on the left framework grains are in
    contact light blue arrows. It is said to have
    an intact framework. On the right, the rock is
    matrix-supported dark blue arrows and the
    grains are not touching. This is called a
    diamictite, and is said to have a dispersed
    framework.

7
Diamictite.The high matrix content blue arrows
is best seen where framework grains have been
plucked yellow stars.
  • The large amount of matrix is sufficient to form
    durable external molds of missing framework
    grains. Such high matrix content is commonly
    associated with glacial activity, which does not
    selectively remove the finer matrix grains, or
    flood episodes.

8
Sand-stone.The highest proportion of grains lie
in the range between 2 mm and 1/16 mm. These
rocks are also called arenites.
  • The yellow arrows point to individual grains
    which show up slightly darker than their
    neighbouring grains. Virtually all the grains are
    of the stable silicate mineral quartz, and so
    this is a quartz sandstone or quartz arenite.

9
More Quartz Sandstones
  • The sample on the left shows lamination, parallel
    to the green arrow, reflecting subtle changes in
    colour due to trace amounts of stain in the
    cementing material that holds the grains
    together. Lighter coloured layers, lacking the
    stain, are highlighted by light blue arrows.
    Yellow arrows point to individual grains. The
    right sample shows the uniform light appearance
    of many quartz arenites.

10
Lithic Arenite.Lithic (from the Greek lithos,
meaning stone) sandstone or arenite is
characterized by abundant rock fragments.
  • Because of the very high mechanical and chemical
    stability of quartz, it will also usually be
    abundant in lithic sandstone. As a result, lithic
    arenites characteristically have a
    salt-and-pepper look to them. This example has
    traces of woody plant fossil matter brown
    arrows.

11
Lithic Arenites/Sandstones
  • These examples are from the Belly River Formation
    of Cretaceous age (on the order of 80 million
    years old), from the Foreland Basin of Western
    Canada. In these classic salt-and-pepper lithic
    arenites, the pepper is sand-sized grains of
    chert. Although chemically the same as quartz,
    chert is classified as a lithic grain or rock
    fragment by most sedimentologists, rather than as
    a variation of quartz.

12
Siltstone.Silt-sized grains are by definition
between 1/16 and 1/256 mm.
  • This sample from the Spray River Group of Western
    Canada is quarried near Canmore as Rundle Rock,
    and is used as a facing stone in construction,
    especially common on upscale homes. Clearly,
    individual grains are barely discernible without
    magnification.

13
Lamination and Bedding in Siliciclastics
  • These two views of the Spray River siltstone
    illustrate lamination parallel to green arrows,
    which is basically a synonym for layering. This
    characteristic of many sedimentary rocks is
    produced by discontinuities (e.g. grain size,
    grain type, colour) in sedimentation. Discreet
    units of sediment are bounded by bedding planes
    blue arrows the layers are called beds if they
    exceed 1 cm in thickness.

14
Siltstone.At these fine grain sizes, individual
grains can barely be detected even with a hand
lens, and only if they are coarse silt.
  • The next grain size working down from silt is
    clay, less than 1/256 mm. It is not generally
    practical, even with significant magnification,
    to distinguish between fine silt- and clay-sized
    grains. This practical limitation gives rise to
    the two siliciclastic rock types that follow.

15
Mudstone.This term embraces rocks with grain
sizes less than 1/16 mm, and what is called
blocky fracture, without distinguishing silt vs.
clay.
  • The sample above is relatively thick, bounded
    above and below by bedding planes blue arrows,
    and has broken along irregular failure surfaces
    unrelated to bedding purple arrows into the
    three pieces, producing relatively thick,
    irregular chunks of rock.

16
Mudstone.At gt 1 cm, the mudstone slab
constitutes a bed, whose upper and lower bounding
surfaces blue arrows are bedding planes.
  • The tendency of mudstones is to break along
    fracture surfaces purple arrow unrelated to
    both bedding blue arrows and lamination green
    arrow. Our understanding is that mudstones do
    this because flat or platy grains are not aligned
    parallel to each other and the lamination.

17
Shale.The term shale is applied to those rocks,
with grains less than 1/16 mm, that are fissile,
or split into thin sheets, without regard to silt
vs. clay.
  • Again, we may not be able to distinguish
    siltstones from claystones proper, so we classify
    the rock according to a gross textural
    characteristic, namely how it breaks or splits.
    Our understanding is that fissile rocks owe their
    character to parallel alignment of platy grains.

18
Fissility Expanded
  • In these two views of a shale, we see bedding
    planes blue arrows being exploited as planes of
    weakness yellow arrows that make this rock
    fissile. It must be pointed out that the parallel
    alignment of mineral grains that produces these
    planes of weakness occurs at the time of
    deposition, unlike the parallel alignment that
    produces slaty cleavage in certain similar
    metamorphic rocks, in response to stress.

19
Fissility Not Always Planar
  • These views of a shale illustrate that the
    lamination of a shale, the bedding planes of that
    shale blue arrows, and the resulting fissility
    purple arrows are not necessarily planar. The
    sea or lake bottom is often characterized by an
    irregular surface that is referred to as a
    bedform (ripples and dunes are examples). Bedform
    development is controlled by the interplay of
    sediment and waves or currents.

20
Colour as Environmental Indicator
  • The different colours of these shale samples tell
    us something about the conditions at their
    environment of deposition. The black colour of
    the left specimen is due to preserved organic
    matter in an anoxic or anaerobic environment,
    whereas the red sample on the right reflects
    oxidizing conditions that have turned the iron
    content red.
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