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Chapter 6 Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

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Title: Chapter 6 Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks


1
Chapter 6 Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks
GEOL 101 Introductory Geology
2
Sediments
  • Collective name for loose, solid particles
    originated from weathering and erosion, thus
    Unconsolidated.
  • Classification of sediments based on sizes
  • Gravel gt 2mm
  • Sand between 1/16 and 2 mm
  • Silt between 1/256 mm and 1/16 mm
  • Clay lt 1/256 mm

3
Change from Sediments to Sed Rxs
  • Transportation
  • Roundness round distance from source
  • Sorting well sorted - distance from source
  • Deposition settle of particles
  • Preservation

4
Change from Sediments to Sed Rxs
  • Lithification
  • Compaction reduction in pore space
  • Cementation seal out the pores
  • Crystallization growth of crystals from
    solution.

5
Sedimentation Process
6
What is Sedimentary Rock?
  • Sedimentary rocks are products of mechanical and
    chemical weathering
  • Account for about 5 (by volume) of Earths
    upper crust
  • Contain evidence of past environments
  • Provide information about sediment transport
  • Often contain fossils
  • Economic importance
  • Coal
  • Petroleum and natural gas
  • Sources of iron, aluminum, and manganese

7
Sedimentary Rocks
  • Rock types
  • Classification
  • Sedimentary Environments
  • Fossils

8
Sedimentary Rock Classification
  • Classified according to material type
  • Clastic
  • Chemical
  • Two major textures are used in the classification
    of sedimentary rocks
  • Clastic
  • Discrete fragments and particles
  • All detrital rocks have a clastic texture
  • Nonclastic
  • Pattern of interlocking crystals
  • May resemble an igneous rock

9
Sedimentary Rocks Types
  • Sediment originates from mechanical and/or
    chemical weathering
  • Rock types are based on the source of the
    material
  • Clastic rocks transported sediment as solid
    particles
  • Chemical rocks sediment that was once in
    solution

10
Detrital Sedimentary Rocks
  • The chief constituents of detrital rocks include
  • Clay minerals
  • Quartz
  • Feldspars
  • Micas
  • Particle size is used to distinguish among the
    various types of detrital rocks
  • Particle shape and sorting give indication of
    transport distance (maturity)

11
Particle Size Classification
12
Sorting, Shape, Setting
Sorting
Sphericity Roundness
Depositional Setting
13
Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
  • Common Clastic sedimentary rocks (in order of
    increasing particle size)
  • Shale
  • Mud-sized particles in thin layers that are
    commonly referred to as laminea
  • Most common sedimentary rock
  • Sandstone
  • Composed of sand-sized particles
  • Forms in a variety of environments
  • Sorting, shape, and composition of the grains can
    be used to interpret the rocks history
  • Quartz is the predominant mineral

14
Detrital Sedimentary Rocks
  • Conglomerate and breccia
  • Both are composed of particles greater than 2mm
    in diameter
  • Conglomerate consists largely of rounded gravels
  • Breccia is composed mainly of large angular
    particles

15
Shale containing plant remains
16
Sandstone
17
Conglomerate
18
Breccia
19
Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
  • Consist of precipitated material that was once in
    solution
  • Precipitation of material occurs in two ways
  • Inorganic processes
  • Organic processes (biochemical origin)
  • Common chemical sedimentary rocks

20
Chemical Sedimentary RocksCommon Types
  • Limestone
  • Dolostone
  • Chert
  • Evaporites
  • Coal

21
Limestone
  • Most abundant chemical rock
  • Composed of calcite carbonate CaCO3
  • Marine biochemical limestones form as coral
    reefs, coquina (broken shells), and chalk
    (microscopic organisms)
  • Inorganic limestones include travertine and
    oolitic limestone

22
Coquina
23
Fossiliferous Limestone
24
Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
  • Dolostone
  • Composed of calcite, magnesium carbonate CaMgCO3
  • Typically formed secondarily from limestone
  • Chert
  • Made of microcrystalline quartz
  • Varieties include flint , jasper and agate
    (banded form)
  • Evaporites
  • Evaporation triggers deposition of chemical
    precipitates
  • Examples include rock salt and rock gypsum

25
Chert
Agate Banded Chert
26
Coal
  • Common chemical sedimentary rocks
  • Different from other rocks because it is composed
    of organic material
  • Stages in coal formation (in order)
  • Plant material
  • Peat
  • Lignite
  • Bituminous

27
Coal
28
Coal Formation Stages
29
Sedimentary Environments
  • A geographic setting where sediment is
    accumulating
  • Determines the nature of the sediments that
    accumulate (grain size, grain shape, etc.)
  • Identified by sedimentary facies, fossils, and
    structures

30
Sedimentary Environments
  • Continental
  • Dominated by stream erosion and deposition
  • Glacial
  • Wind (eolian)
  • Marine
  • Shallow (lt 200 meters)
  • Deep (seaward of continental shelves)
  • Transitional (shoreline)
  • Tidal flats
  • Lagoons
  • Deltas

31
Depositional Environments
32
Depositional Environments
Marine
Continental
33
Turbidity Currents
34
Turbidity Currents
Graded Bedding
35
Evaporite Formation
36
Sedimentary Facies
  • Different sediments often accumulate adjacent to
    one another at the same time
  • Facies possesses a distinctive set of
    characteristics reflecting the conditions in a
    particular environment
  • Merging of adjacent facies tends to be a gradual
    transition

37
Sedimentary Facies
38
Sedimentary Structures
  • Useful for interpreting sedimentary environment
  • Strata or beds, layers of similar sediment
    (most characteristic of sedimentary rocks)
  • Lamina thin layers (lt 1cm)
  • Bedding planes separate strata
  • Cross-bedding
  • Graded beds
  • Ripple marks
  • Mud cracks

39
Bedding
40
Bedding Structures
Graded bedding
Lamina
41
Cross Beds
42
Ripple Marks
unconsolidated sediment
lithified rock
43
Mud Cracks
44
Grand Canyon
o
45
Fossils Evidence of past life
  • By definition, fossils are the traces or remains
    of prehistoric life now preserved in rock
  • Fossils are generally found in sediment or
    sedimentary rock (rarely in metamorphic and never
    in igneous rock)

46
Dinosaur footprint in limestone
47
Fossils Evidence of past life
  • Geologically fossils are important for several
    reasons
  • Aid in interpretation of the geologic past
  • Serve as important time indicators
  • Allow for correlation of rocks from different
    places
  • Studied in detail in Historical Geology (GEOL
    102), offered in Spring 2004

48
Chalk Cliffs of Dover, England
Tiny planckon shells
Deposited on sea floor Later uplifted
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