1 / 96

Sedimentary Rocks— The Archives of Earth History

Chapter 6. Sedimentary Rocks— The Archives of Earth History. History from Sedimentary Rocks. How do we know whether sedimentary rocks were deposited on continents—river floodplains or desert sand dunes? at the water's edge? in the sea? Sedimentary rocks

nyoko
Download Presentation

Sedimentary Rocks— The Archives of Earth History

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6 Sedimentary Rocks—The Archives of Earth History

  2. History from Sedimentary Rocks • How do we know whether sedimentary rocks were deposited on • continents—river floodplains or desert sand dunes? • at the water's edge? • in the sea? • Sedimentary rocks • preserve evidence of surface depositional processes • and many contain fossils • These things give clues to the depositional environment • Depositional environments are specific areas • or environments where sediment is deposited

  3. Arches National Park, Utah • Delicate Arch • is one of several arches, pillars, and spires in • Arches National Park • in the Jurassic-aged Entrada Sandstone • which were formed by weathering and erosion • along large fractures called joints

  4. Sedimentary Rocks • Sedimentary rocks • preserve evidence • of the physical, chemical and biological processes • that formed them • Some sedimentary rocks are resources, or contain resources • petroleum • natural gas • coal • phosphorus

  5. Phosphorous • For instance, phosphorous • from phosphorous-rich sedimentary rocks • is used in • fertilizers • animal-feed supplements • metallurgy • matches • ceramics • preserved foods

  6. Investigating Sedimentary Rocks • Observation and data gathering • by visiting rock exposures (outcrops) • and carefully examining • textures • composition • fossils (if present) • thickness • relationships to other rocks • Preliminary interpretations in the field may be made • For example: • red rocks may have been deposited on land • whereas greenish rocks are more typical of marine deposits • (Caution: Exceptions are numerous!)

  7. Investigating Sedimentary Rocks • More careful study of the rocks is needed: • microscopic examination • chemical analyses • fossil identification • interpretation of vertical and lateral facies relationships • comparison with present-day sediments • When data have been analyzed, geologists make an environmental interpretation

  8. Composition of Detrital Rocks • Very common minerals in detrital rocks: • quartz, feldspars, and clay minerals • Detrital rock composition tells • about source rocks, • not transport and deposition • Quartz sand may have been deposited • in a river system • on a beach or • in sand dunes

  9. Composition of Chemical Sedimentary Rocks • Composition of chemical sedimentary rocks • is more useful in revealing environmental information • Limestone is deposited in warm, shallow seas • although a small amount also originates in lakes • Evaporites such as rock salt and rock gypsum • indicate arid environments • where evaporation rates were high

  10. Grain Size • Detrital grain size gives some indication • of the energy conditions • during transport and deposition • High-energy processes • such as swift-flowing streams and waves • are needed to transport gravel • Conglomerate must have been deposited • in areas where these processes prevail • Sand transport also requires high-energy transport • Silt and clay are transported • by weak currents and accumulate • only under low-energy conditions • as in lakes and lagoons

  11. Sorting and Rounding • Texture refers to the size, distribution, shape, and arrangement of clasts • Sorting and rounding are two textural features • of detrital sedimentary rocks • that aid in determining depositional processes • Rounding is the degree to which • detrital particles have their sharp corners and edges • warn away by abrasion • Gravel in transport is rounded very quickly • as the particles collide with one another • Smaller particles in suspension • are usually not as rounded

  12. Rounding • All of these stones are rounded • and have lost their sharp edges • The stone in the upper left is also spherical

  13. Sorting • Sorting refers to the variation • in size of particles making up sediment or sedimentary rocks • If the size range is not very great, • the sediment or rock is well sorted • If they have a wide range of sizes, • they are poorly sorted • Wind has a limited ability to transport sediment • But glaciers can carry any size particles • Glacial deposits are poorly sorted, wind deposits are well-sorted

  14. Rounding and Sorting • A deposit • of well rounded • moderately sorted gravel • Versus a deposit • of angular • poorly sorted gravel

  15. Sedimentary Structures • Sedimentary structures are • features that formed at the time of deposition or shortly thereafter • and are manifestations of the physical and biological processes • that operated in depositional environments • Structures • seen in present-day environments • or produced in experiments • help provide information • about depositional environments of rocks • with similar structures

  16. Bedding • Sedimentary rocks generally have bedding or stratification • Individual layers less than 1 cm thick are laminations • common in mudrocks • Beds are thicker than 1 cm • common in rocks with coarser grains

  17. Graded Bedding • Graded bedding is common in turbidity current deposits • which form when sediment-water mixtures flow along the seafloor • Some beds show an upward gradual decrease in grain size, known as graded bedding • As they slow, • the largest particles settle out, • then smaller ones

  18. Cross-Bedding • Cross-bedding forms when layers come to rest • at an angle to the surface • upon which they accumulate • as on the downwind side of a sand dune • Cross-beds result from transport • by either water or wind • The beds are inclined or dip downward • in the direction of the prevailing current • They indicate direction of the flow of ancient currents

  19. Cross-Bedding • Individual beds are deposited at an angle • Horizontal bedding and cross-bedding in Upper Cambrian St. Peter Sandstone in Wisconsin

  20. Ripple Marks • Small-scale alternating ridges and troughs • known as ripple marks are common • on bedding planes, especially in sandstone • Current ripple marks • formed from wind or water flow • and have asymmetry • indicating the original flow direction • Wave-formed ripple marks • result from the to-and-fro motion of waves • and tend to be symmetrical

  21. Current Ripple Marks • Ripples with an asymmetrical shape • The photo shows current ripples • that formed in a small stream channel • with flow from right to left

  22. Wave-Formed Ripples • As the waves wash back and forth, • symmetrical ripples form • The photo shows wave-formed ripple marks • in shallow seawater

  23. Mud Cracks • When clay-rich sediments dry, they shrink • and crack into polygonal patterns • bounded by fractures called mud cracks • Mud cracks require wetting and drying to form, • as along a lakeshore • or a river flood plain • or where mud is exposed at low tide along a seashore

  24. Ancient Mud Cracks • Mud cracks in ancient rocks • in Glacier National Park, Montana • Mud cracks can fill in • with sediment • when they are preserved • as seen here

  25. Biogenic Sedimentary Structures • Biogenic sedimentary structures include • tracks • burrows • trails • called trace fossils • Extensive burrowing by organisms • is called bioturbation • and may alter sediments so thoroughly • that other structures are disrupted or destroyed

  26. Bioturbation • U-shaped burrows • Vertical burrows

  27. Bioturbation • Vertical, dark-colored areas in this rock are sediment-filled burrows

  28. No Single Structure Is Unique • Sedimentary structures are important • for environmental analyses • but no single structure is unique to a specific environment • Example: • Current ripples are found • in stream channels • in tidal channels • Environmental determinations • are usually successful with • associations of groups of sedimentary structures • taken along with other sedimentary rock properties

  29. Sedimentary Structures • Sedimentary structures and fossils • allow geologists to resolve the history of an area • when rocks have been deformed • Here, the mudcrack “V” opens toward younger strata, • and shape of current ripple marks • Indicate that the youngest layer is lower right

  30. Geometry of Sedimentary Rocks • The three-dimensional shape or geometry • of a sedimentary rock body • may be helpful in environmental analyses • but it must be used with caution • because the same geometry may be found • in more than one environment. • Geometry can be modified by sediment compaction • during lithification • and by erosion and deformation • Nevertheless, it is useful in conjunction • with other features

  31. Blanket or Sheet Geometry • Some of the most extensive sedimentary rocks • in the geologic record result from • marine transgressions and regressions • The rocks commonly cover • hundreds or thousands of square kilometers • but are perhaps only • a few tens to hundreds of meters thick • Their thickness is small compared • to their length and width • Thus, they are said to have • blanket or sheet geometry

  32. Elongate or Shoestring Geometry • Some sand deposits have an elongate or shoestring geometry • especially those deposited in • stream channels • or barrier islands

  33. Other Geometries • Delta deposits tend to be lens shaped • when viewed in cross profile or long profile • but lobate when observed from above • Buried reefs are irregular • but many are long and narrow • or rather circular

  34. Fossils—The Biologic Content of Sedimentary Rocks • Fossils • are the remains or traces of prehistoric organisms • can be used to establish biostratigraphic units • are important constituents of rocks, sometimes making up the entire rock • are important for determining depositional environments • Some rocks, especially limestones, are composed • largely of shells of marine-dwelling animals • or even the droppings of these organisms

  35. Fossils Are Constituents of Sedimentary Rocks • This variety of limestone, • known as coquina, • is made entirely of shell fragments

  36. Fossils in Environmental Analyses • Did the organisms in question live where they were buried? • Or where their remains or fossils transported there? • Example: • Fossil dinosaurs usually indicate deposition • in a land environment such as a river floodplain • But if their bones are found in rocks with • clams, corals and sea lilies, • we assume a carcass was washed out to sea

  37. Environmental Analyses • What kind of habitat did the organisms originally occupy? • Studies of a fossil’s structure • and its living relatives, if any, • help environmental analysis • For example: clams with heavy, thick shells • typically live in shallow turbulent water • whereas those with thin shells • are found in low-energy environments • Most corals live in warm, clear, • shallow marine environments where • symbiotic bacteria can carry out photosynthesis

  38. Microfossils • Microfossils are particularly useful • because many individuals can be recovered • from small rock samples • In oil-drilling operations, small rock chips • called well cuttings are brought to the surface • These cuttings rarely • contain complete fossils of large organisms, • but they might have thousands of microfossils • that aid in relative dating and environmental analyses

  39. Trace Fossils In Place • Trace fossils, too, may be characteristic of particular environments • Trace fossils, of course, are not transported from their original place of origin

  40. Depositional Environments • A depositional environment • is anywhere sediment accumulates • especially a particular area • where a distinctive kind of deposit originates • from physical, chemical, and biological processes • Three broad areas of deposition include • continental • transitional • marine • each of which has several specific environments

  41. Depositional Environments Transitional environments Continental environments Marine environments

  42. Continental Environments • Deposition on continents (on land) might take place in • fluvial systems – rivers and streams • deserts • areas covered by and adjacent to glaciers • Deposits in each of these environments • possess combinations of features • that allow us to differentiate among them

  43. Fluvial • Fluvial refers to river and stream activity • and to their deposits • Fluvial deposits accumulate in either of two types of systems • Braided stream system • with multiple broad, shallow channels • in which mostly sheets of gravel • and cross-bedded sand are deposited • mud is nearly absent

  44. Braided Stream • The deposits of braided streams are mostly • gravel and cross-bedded sand bodies • Mud is nearly absent

  45. Braided Stream Deposits • Braided stream deposits consist of • gravel • cross-bedded sand • but mud is rare or absent

  46. Fluvial Systems • The other type of system is a meandering stream • with winding channels • mostly fine-grained sediments on floodplains • cross-bedded sand bodies with shoestring geometries • point-bar deposits consisting of a sand body • overlying an erosion surface • that developed on the convex side of a meander loop

  47. Meandering Stream • Meandering stream deposits • are mostly fine-grained floodplain • sediments with subordinate sand bodies

  48. Meandering Stream Deposits • In meandering stream deposits, • fine-grained floodplain sediment is common • with subordinate sand bodies

  49. Desert Environments • Desert environments contain an association of features found in • sand dune deposits, • alluvial fan deposits, • and playa lake deposits • Windblown dunes are typically composed • of well-sorted, well-rounded sand • with cross-beds meters to tens of meters high • land-dwelling plants and animals make up any fossils

  50. Alluvial Fans and Playa Lakes • Alluvial fans form best along the margins of desert basins • where streams and debris flows • discharge from mountains onto a valley floor • They form a triangular (fan-shaped) deposit • of sand and gravel • The more central part of a desert basin • might be the site of a temporary lake, a playa lake, • in which laminated mud and evaporites accumulate

More Related