Ch. 2, Part-II Rocks, Rock Materials - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Title: Ch. 2, Part-II Rocks, Rock Materials


1
Ch. 2, Part-IIRocks, Rock Materials Geologic
Structures
2
Chapter (Section) Objectives
  • Review of some of the important mineral and rock
    types and their environmental significance
  • Relationships between atoms, minerals, rocks,
    rock materials
  • Basic silicate building block(s)
  • Properties of rocks minerals
  • Basic rock types, basis for classification,
  • Why this stuff is important the types of
    information they provide
  • Appreciation/significance of geologic structures
  • Layering
  • Folds
  • Faults
  • Other structures (joints, dikes/sills, etc.)

3
  • Rock
  • A solid, cohesive aggregate of grains of one or
    more minerals
  • Mineral
  • Naturally occurring crystalline inorganic
    substance with a definite chemical composition
    element or compound with a systematic arrangement
    of atoms / molecular structure (e.g., sulfur,
    salt, silicates such as feldspar)
  • Crystallinity
  • Atomic arrangement imparts specific physical and
    chemical properties
  • Physical properties of minerals
  • color, hardness, cleavage, specific gravity,
    streak, etc.

4
  • Minerals
  • Systematic groupings of atoms
  • e.g., salt (NaCl)

5
  • Relationship between
  • Atoms
  • Molecules
  • Minerals
  • Rocks
  • Landforms

6
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7
Basic Silicate Structure The silica tetrahedron
8
Silicate Mineral Structures
9
Main Rock Forming Minerals
  • Fewer than 20 minerals account for the bulk of
    the earths crust Most are silicates (See
    Hand Specimens)

Percent in Crust Mineral (formula)
Igneous Sedimentary
Metamorphic   51 Feldspar (Na, K, Ca)
(Al,Si)4 O8 X X X (39) Plagioclase (Na, Ca)
(Al,Si)4 O8 (12) Alkali feldspar (Na, K)
(Al,Si)4 O8 12 Quartz- SiO2 X X X 11
Pyroxene- (Ca, Mg, Fe) Si2 O6 X X 5
Amphibole- X X 5 Mica- X X 5
Clay- X 3 Olivine (Mg, Fe)2 Si O4 X 8
Others (non-silicates)- X X X halides,
sulfates, sulfides, carbonates, Fe-Ti oxides,
phosphates, native elements, etc.) Minor and
trace elements Minor element minerals (sulfides,
uranium mins., heavy metals, trace element
substitutions.
10
Rock Materials Properties
  • Rock materials
  • Composed of one or more component minerals
    having discrete physical and chemical
    characteristics
  • The physical (e.g., color, hardness) and chemical
    characteristics of rocks and rock material
    reflect the combined characteristics (properties)
    of the discrete component materials (i.e.,
    minerals)
  •  

11
Rock Strength Stess-Strain Relationships
12
Three (3) Major Rock Types
  • Igneous
  • Formed from molten material (e.g., lava, granite)
  • Sedimentary (including sediment)
  • Formed from the weathering of other rocks, as
    chemical precipitates, or biologic material
    (shells)
  • Metamorphic (including hydrothermal rocks
    minerals)
  • Rocks modified/changed by heat and/or pressure

13
Relationship between Rock Types and Plate
Tectonics
14
  • Rock Cycle- Cycle of melting, crystallization,
    weathering/erosion, transportation, deposition,
    sedimentation, deformation metamorphism, repeat
    of crustal materials.

15
Igneous Rocks
  • Definition
  • Rocks formed from high-temperature silicate
    liquid (molten) rock material (magma)
    high-temperature ? 800oC to
    1300oC
  • Igneous rock material
  • Formed by solidification of molten material
  • Usually with the formation of high-temperature
    minerals (as crystals) that form from the magma
    as it cools

16
Classification of Igneous Rocks
  • By Physical Criteria, i.e., grain size
  • Cooling rate where cooling occurs (determines
    grain size)
  • Chemical Criteria, i.e., Composition
  • Mainly by relative amounts of iron (Fe),
    magnesium (Mg), silicon (Si), water
  • Primary Materials
  • Material from which magma is formed (mantle,
    crust)
  • Material that is melted to form magma

17
Classification of Igneous Rocks By Physical
Criteria
  • Slow cooling ? produces large crystals (minerals)
    ? Coarse-grained rocks
  • Example Granite
  • Slow cooling due to intrusive, thermally
    insulated emplacement of magma
  • Rapid cooling ? produces small, or no crystals ?
    Fine-grained rocks
  • Example lava, ash
  • Rapid cooling due to extrusion, i.e., eruption
    of magma at surface

18
Relationship between Rock Types and Plate
Tectonics
19
Classification of Igneous Rocks By Physical
Criteria
20
Correlations between composition and physical
properties, such as eruptive style of volcanic
rocks
  • Silica Content
  • Si-poor magmas (Hawiian-type) are fluid (low
    viscosity)
  • Si-rich volcanic magmas (St. Helens-type) are
    viscous (sticky)
  • Explosiveness
  • Explosive eruptions result from Si-rich magmas w/
    water, gases
  • Explosiveness depends on how well gases and water
    are released from the magma
  • Lower viscosity, less gas ? non-explosive
    eruptions
  • High viscosity gas ? violently explosive
    eruptions
  • So where why do these types occur??? (more
    later)

21
Chemical Physical Properties of Igneous Rocks
and Plate Tectonics
22
Sedimentary Rocks
  • Rocks form from
  • The mechanical and/or chemical weathering of
    other rocks
  • Material deposited/precipitated from water via
    chemical or biological (organic) processes

23
Types / Classification of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Clastic Formed from the mechanical and/or
    chemical weathering of other rock materials
  • Sandstone, shale
  • conglomerate
  • Chemical Formed as inorganic precipitates (i.e.,
    water saturated with respect to chemical
    compounds)
  • Limestone (Ca-carbonates (caliche)
  • Other salts, e.g., sulfates, hydroxides, halogen
    salts (e.g., NaCl)
  • Silica
  • Organic Formed from (and including) organic
    material such as
  • Fossil materials (typically shells, diatoms,
    etc.) exoskeletons, or endoskeletons of aquatic
    (e.g., marine) organisms
  • Organic and/or chemical cements (carbonate,
    silica, phosphates)
  • Combinations
  • e.g., Clastic or organic sediment with chemical
    cement

24
Clastic Sedimentary Rocks Further classified by
grain size
25
  • Chemical Sediments
  • e.g., evaporite salt deposits

26
Organic Sediment Chalk
27
Environmental Conditions Indicated From Sediment
and Sedimentary Rocks
  • Environment in which they formed, e.g.,
  • Marine
  • Deep (limestone, shale)
  • Shallow (deltas, reefs)
  • Terrestrial
  • Glacial
  • River/stream
  • Arid/desert
  • Environmental conditions
  • Source(s)
  • Mode and distance of transport
  • Depositional processes, e.g., near-source vs.
    mature sediment (coarse sand vs. shale)

28
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29
Metamorphic Rocks
  • Formed from other rocks but modified
    (e.g.,recrystallized) by heat and/or pressure
  • Types
  • Foliated (alignment or banding of planar
    minerals)
  • Slate
  • Schist
  • gneiss
  • Non-foliated (no preferrential alignment of
    minerals)
  • Quartzite
  • Marble (sometimes foliated)
  • Hydrothermal/baked rocks (skarn)

30
Foliated Metamorphic Rock
31
Significance of Rock Types to Environmental
Geology
  • Type and origin of rocks provide insight into
    present or past environmental conditions (e.g.,
    flood deposits, volcanic mudflows)
  • Differences in rock types can have important
    envirornmental implications (e.g., strata/layers)
  • Physical Properties
  • Strength
  • Planes of weakness
  • Porosity, permeability
  • Chemical Properties
  • Tendency to dissolve (solubility), leach, or react

32
Examples
  • Limestone
  • Typically formed in a reef or deep marine setting
  • Highly stable in arid climates, unstable in wet
    climates
  • Poor aquifer material
  • Highly conducive to formation of ore deposits
    when adjacent to igneous magmas or hydrothermal
    fluids
  • Implications for finding them in high mountains?

33
Examples cont
  • Sandstone
  • Formed as near-shore marine and desert
    environments (w/ noteable differences)
  • Moderate strength
  • Generally porous and permeable
  • Foliated Metamorphic Rocks
  • Implies formation under conditions of directed
    tectonic forces
  • Have potential planes of weakness
  • Others (See charts/figures)

34
Relationship between Rock Types and Plate
Tectonics
35
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