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Chapter 6. Sedimentary Rocks— The Archives of Earth History Sedimentary Environments and Structures. Sedimentary Rocks. formed at or near the surface at relatively low temperatures. from sediments which include boulders, cobbles, gravels, sands, silts, and clay particles.
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Chapter 6 Sedimentary Rocks—The Archives of Earth History Sedimentary EnvironmentsandStructures
Sedimentary Rocks • formed at or near the surface at relatively low temperatures. • from sediments which include boulders, cobbles, gravels, sands, silts, and clay particles. • OR particles which are suspended and dissolved in water. • Sedimentary rocks • preserve evidence of surface depositional processes • also, many contain fossils • These things give clues to the depositional environment • Depositional environments are specific areas: continent, marine, transitional • environments where sediment is depositedsuch as beach, desert, stream, lake, marine
Beach Environment • Sand deposition • Sand-size particles are deposited on a beach along the Pacific coast of the United States • After many years and layers of deposition, sand is compacted, and eventually cemented to form sandstone. • Many ancient sandstones • possess features that indicate they were also deposited on beaches • Present day despositional environments are used as models to help decode the rocks of the past. (uniformitarianism)
Sedimentary rocks • Sedimentary rocks may be • Detrital • chemical, including biochemical • Each rock preserves evidence of how it was formed
Investigating Sedimentary Rocks • Observation and data gathering • carefully examine • textures • composition • fossils (if present) • Thickness of rock bed • relationships to other rocks • Preliminary interpretations in the field • For example: • red rocks may have been deposited on land • whereas greenish rocks are more typical of marine deposits • (caution: exceptions are numerous)
Grain Size • Detrital grain size • energy conditions • transport and deposition • High-energy processes • streams and waves • transport gravel • Rock type: Conglomerate • Sand transport also requires vigorous currents • Sand transport also requires vigorous currents • Silt and clay are transported • by weak currents and accumulate • only under low-energy conditions • as in lakes and lagoons
Rounding and Sorting • A deposit • of well rounded • and well sorted gravel • Angular, poorly sorted gravel
Bedding • Sedimentary rocks generally have bedding orstratification • Individual layers less than 1 cm thick are laminations • common in mudrocks Sedimentary Structures • Beds are thicker than 1 cm • common in rocks with coarser grains
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 gradedbedding • As they slow, • the largest particles settle out then smaller ones
Cross-Bedding • Tabular cross-bedding forms by deposition on sand waves • Tabular cross-bedding in the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation in Montana
Cross-Bedding • Trough cross-bedding formed by migrating dunes • Trough cross-beds in the Pliocene Six Mile Creek Formation, Montana
Current Ripple Marks • Ripples with an asymmetrical shape • In the close-up of one ripple, • the internal structure • shows small-scale cross-bedding • The photo shows current ripples • that formed in a small stream channel • with flow from right to left
Wave-Formed Ripples • As the waves wash back and forth, • symmetrical ripples form • The photo shows wave-formed ripple marks • in shallow seawater
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
Ancient Mud Cracks • Mud cracks in ancient rocks • in Glacier National Park, Montana • Mud cracks typically fill in • with sediment • when they are preserved • as seen here
Biogenic Sedimentary Structures • Biogenic sedimentary structures include • tracks • burrows • trails • called trace fossils • Extensive burrowing by organisms • is called bioturbation • It may alter sediments so thoroughly • that other structures are disrupted or destroyed
Bioturbation • U-shaped burrows • Vertical burrows
Bioturbation • Vertical, dark-colored areas in this rock are sediment-filled burrows • Could you use burrows such as these to relatively date layers in deformed sedimentary rocks?
No Single Structure Is Unique to any one environment • Sedimentary structures are important • in environmental analyses • but no single structure is unique to a specific environment • Example: • Current ripples are found • in stream channels • in tidal channels • on the sea floor • Environmental determinations • are usually successful with • associations of a groups of sedimentary structures • taken along with other sedimentary rock properties
Fossils Are Constituents of Sedimentary Rocks • This variety of limestone, • known as coquina, • is made entirely of shell fragments
Depositional Environments Transitional environments Continental environments Marine environments
Braided Stream • The deposits of braided streams are mostly • gravel and cross-bedded sand with subordinate mud
Braided Stream Deposits • Braided stream deposits consist of • conglomerate • cross-bedded sandstone • but mudstone is rare or absent
Meandering Stream • Meandering stream deposits • are mostly fine-grained floodplain • sediments with subordinate sand bodies
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
Associations in Desert Basin • A desert basin showing the association • of alluvial fan, • sand dune, • and playa lake deposits • In the photo, • the light colored area in the distance • is a playa lake deposit in Utah
Dune Cross-Beds • Large-scale cross-beds • in a Permian-aged • wind-blown dune deposit in Arizona
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
Glacial Environments • Glacial deposits and environments are collectively called drift • Till is poorly sorted, nonstratified drift • deposited directly by glacial ice • mostly in ridge-like deposits called moraines • Outwash is sand and gravel deposited • by braided streams issuing from melting glaciers • The association of these deposits along with • scratched (striated) and polished bedrock • Indicates that glaciers were involved
Moraines and Till • Origin of glacial drift
Glacial Dropstone in Varves • Glacial lake deposits show • alternating dark and light laminations • Each dark-light couplet is a varve, • representing one year’s accumulation of sediment • light layers accumulate in summer • dark in winter • Dropstones • liberated from icebergs • may also be present • Varves with a dropstone
Transitional Environments Transitional environments
Simple Deltas • topset beds • foreset beds • bottomset beds • The simplest deltas are those in lakes and consist of • As the delta builds outward it progrades • and forms a vertical sequence of rocks • that becomes coarser-grained from the bottom to top • The bottomset beds may contain marine (or lake) fossils, • whereas the topset beds contain land fossils
Wave-Dominated Deltas • Wave-dominated deltas • such as the Nile Delta of Egypt • also have distributary channels • but their seaward margin • is modified by wave action
Stream/River-Dominated Deltas • Stream/river-dominated deltas • have long distributary channels • extending far seaward • Mississippi River delta
Tide-Dominated Deltas • Tide-Dominated Deltas, • such as the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta • of Ban-gladesh • have tidal sand bodies • along the direction of tidal flow
Barrier Island Complex • Subenvironments of a barrier islandcomplex
Tidal Flats • Tidal-flat deposits showing a prograding shoreline • Notice the distinctive cross-beds • that dip in opposite directions • How could this happen?
Marine Environments Marine environments
Detrital Marine Environments • The gently sloping area adjacent to a continent • is a continental shelf • It consists of a high-energy inner part that is • periodically stirred up by waves and tidal currents • Its sediment is mostly sand, • shaped into large cross-bedded dunes • Bedding planes are commonly marked • by wave-formed ripple marks • Marine fossils and bioturbation are typical
Slope and Rise • The low-energy part of the shelf • has mostly mud with marine fossils, • and interfingers with inner-shelf sand • Much sediment derived from the continents • crosses the continental shelf • and is funneled into deeper water • through submarine canyons • It eventually comes to rest • on the continental slope and continental rise • as a series of overlapping submarine fans
Slope and Rise • Once sediment passes the outer margin • of the self, the shelf-slope break, • turbidity currents transport it • So sand with graded bedding is common • Also common is mud that settled from seawater
Detrital Marine Environments • Shelf, slope and rise environments • The main avenues of sediment transport • across the shelf are submarine canyons Turbidity currents carry sediment to the submarine fans Sand with graded bedding and mud settled from seawater
Deep Sea • Beyond the continental rise, the seafloor is • nearly completely covered by fine-grained deposits • no sand and gravel • or no sediment at all • near mid-ocean ridges • The main sources of sediment are: • windblown dust from continents or oceanic islands • volcanic ash • shells of microorganisms dwelling • in surface waters of the ocean
Deep Sea • Types of sediment are: • pelagic clay, • which covers most of the deeper parts • of the seafloor • calcareous (CaCO3) and siliceous (SiO2) oozes • made up of microscopic shells
Carbonate Environments • Carbonate rocks are • limestone, which is composed of calcite • dolostone, which is composed of dolomite • most dolostone is altered limestone • Limestone is similar to detrital rock in some ways • Many limestones are made up of • gravel-sized grains • sand-sized grains • microcrystalline carbonate mud called micrite • but the grains are all calcite • and are formed in the environment of deposition, • not transported there