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Rocks and the Rock Cycle

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Rocks and the Rock Cycle ROCKS! Rocks are: naturally formed solid that is usually made up of one or more types of minerals. They are divided into three groups based ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rocks and the Rock Cycle


1
Rocks and the Rock Cycle
2
ROCKS!
  • Rocks are naturally formed solid that is
    usually made up of one or more types of minerals.
  • They are divided into three groups based on how
    they form.

3
  • The 3 types are
  • Igneous Rocks formed when molten rock cools and
    becomes solid.
  • Made frommolten rock or magma
  • Classified according to origin, texture, and
    mineral composition

4
  • Four textures
  • Glassy
  • Fine Grain
  • Coarse Grain
  • Porphyritichas large crystals scattered on a
    background of much smaller crystals
  • 2 main categories of igneous rocks are
  • Intrusiveforms when magma cools inside Earth
  • Extrusiveforms when lava cools on Earth's
    surface

5
Basalt Forming--Extrusive
6
Textures
  • Glassy
  • Fine-grained
  • Coarse-grained
  • Porphyritic

Obsidian
Granite
Basalt
Granite
7
  • Extrusive- Formed from lava volcanic
  • Intrusive- Formed deep within the earth

Obsidian
Pumice
8
Uses of Igneous Rock
  • Many igneous rocks are hard, dense, and durable
    These qualities make them very useful for tools
    and building materials.
  • Granite is one of the most abundant igneous
    rocks and it has a long history of being used as
    a building material.
  • Basalt is crushed to make gravel that is used in
    construction
  • Pumice has a rough surface which makes it a good
    abrasive for cleaning and polishing.
  • Perlite comes from obsidian and is often mixed
    with soil for starting vegetable seeds.

9
  • Sedimentary Rocks forms when pieces of older
    rocks, plants, and other loose material get
    pressed or cemented together.
  • Made from--particles deposited by wind and water
    after being eroded from other rock.

10
Lithification
  • The process by which sediment becomes
    sedimentary rock.
  • The four steps that make sedimentary rock.
  • Erosion
  • Deposition
  • Compaction
  • Cementation

11
Erosion
  • Occurs when water or wind loosens rock and soil
    and carries it away.
  • Erosion is a destructive force.

12
Deposition
  • The process by which the sediment settles out of
    the water or air carrying it.
  • Sediment is deposited when the wind or water
    slows down.
  • After sediment has been deposited, the processes
    of compaction and cementation change the sediment
    into sedimentary rock.

13
Compaction
  • As the sediments settle they will loosely fit on
    top of each other.
  • As the years go by, more and more sediment is
    added.
  • The bottom layers get compacted by the weight of
    the layers above them.
  • Compaction is the process that presses sediments
    together.

14
  • Classified into 3 categories according towhat
    they are made of.
  • These categories are
  • Clastic formed when rock fragments are squeezed
    together.
  • Organic formed from the remains of living
    things.
  • Chemical formed when dissolved minerals
    crystallize

15
Common Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
16
Organic Rocks
Fossiliferous Limestone
  • Limestone

Coquina
17
Coal
  • Formed from the remains of ancient swamps.
  • As layer upon layer of dead plants built up, the
    bottom layers were compacted into coal.
  • Stored chemical energy from the sun.
  • Fossil fuel.

18
Chalk
  • Formed from the shells of ancient sea life.

19
Seven Sisters in Sussex
20
Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
21
Halite Forms large crystals
22
Uses of Sedimentary Rock
  • Sandstone and Limestone as building materials.
  • Whitehouse in Washington D.C. is built of
    sandstone.
  • Limestone has many industrial uses, including
    being used in smelting iron ore and making cement.

23
  • Metamorphic rocks rock that has changed from one
    form to another.
  • Made when--heat or pressure causes older rocks to
    change into new types of rocks
  • This is called a metamorphism.

24
Metamorphic Rock Pictures
25
  • Divided into 2 basic groups based onthe
    arrangement of the grains
  • These 2 groups are
  • Foliatedthe thin layering found in many
    metamorphic rocks. These rocks will split along
    these bands.
  • Nonfoliated--Mineral grains are randomized. Do
    not split into layers.

26
Granite to Gneiss-foliated
  • Granite becomes gneiss when subjected to heat
    and pressure.
  • The atoms end up lining up in bands.
  • Gneiss is foliated.

27
Shale to Slate-foliated
  • Slate is formed when shale is subjected to
    pressure.
  • Slate is denser, more compacted than shale and
    the slate becomes foliated.
  • Slate produces flat plates when broken.

28
Slate to Schist-foliated
  • If slate is subjected to even greater pressure
    and moderate temperatures, schist is formed.

29
Quartzite-Nonfoliated
  • Occurs when sandstone is compressed by pressure.
  • It is formed when weakly cemented quartz
    particles in sandstone recrystallize.
  • Usually very hard.

30
Marble - Nonfoliated
  • Formed from metamorphed limestone.
  • Much harder and denser.

31
Economic Importance of Minerals
  • Minerals are in many things we see and use
    everyday such as bricks, glass, cement, plaster,
    iron, gold.
  • Marble is extremely useful for building for
    these reasons
  • It has a fine, even grain.
  • It is relatively easy to cut into thin slabs.
  • It can be polished easily.
  • The Taj Mahal in Agra, India is made of gleaming
    white marble.

32
Taj Mahal
33
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34
Coral Reefs
  • Coral reefs are responsible for the creation of
    one of the 2 types of organic sedimentary rocks
    limestone.
  • Limestone is produced from the hard shells of
    coral left behind when they die and become
    compressed and cemented together.
  • Coral reefs only live in warm, clear, shallow
    tropical water
  • Two locations they can be found in the U.S. are
  • 1. Florida
  • 2. Hawaii

35
  • There are 3 types of coral reefs
  • 1. Fringing reef
  • 2. Barrier reef
  • 3. Atoll
  • Limestone from coral can be found on continents
    in places where uplifting has raised ancient sea
    floors above sea level.

36
Fringing Reef Polynesian island of Mooréa
37
Barrier Reef The Great Barrier Reef in Australia
38
Atoll Maldives in the Indian Ocean
39
The Rock Cycle
40
  • The rock cycle is a series of processes on
    Earths surface and inside the planet that slowly
    change rocks from one kind to another.
  • Earths constructive and destructive forces
    including plate tectonics move rocks through
    the rock cycle.
  • The rock cycle can follow many different
    pathways.

41
IGNEOUS
Crystallization
MAGMA
42
Weathering
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
43
SEDIMENT
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
44
Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
45
Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Crystallization
MAGMA
Uplift
46
Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Increased PT
METAMORPHIC
Crystallization
Burial
MAGMA
Uplift
47
Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
Can you see any shortcuts?
SEDIMENTARY
Increased PT
METAMORPHIC
Crystallization
Melting
Burial
MAGMA
Uplift
48
Erosion
SEDIMENT
Weathering
Transport
Deposition
Volcanic IGNEOUS Plutonic
SEDIMENTARY
Increased PT
METAMORPHIC
Crystallization
Melting
Burial
MAGMA
Uplift
49
The Rock Cycle
  • The diagram of the rock cycle shows how the
    earth's rocks are changed again and again

50
Distribution of Rocks in the U.S.
51
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