350 likes | 604 Views
2. Sedimentary Rocks. Sedimentary Rocks. Rocks formed from sedimentsSedimentum in Latin means
E N D
1. 1
2. 2
3. 3 Sedimentary Rocks Rocks
ß
Weathering to sediment
ß
Transport
(Water, Wind, Waves & Ice)
ß
Deposition of sediment
ß
Diagenesis
4. 4 Physical, chemical & biological changes
Recrystallization (less stable to more stable)
Aragonite to Calcite
Lithification
Compaction & Cementation
Common cements - Calcite, Silica & Iron Oxides
5. 5 75% of all rock outcrops on the continental crust
Yet, only 5% by volume of Earth’s outer crust
6. 6 Contain clues/evidence of past events
Contain fossils
Aid in reconstructing geologic history
Economically important
Coal, Oil, Natural Gas, Groundwater, Aluminum, Manganese
7. 7 Detrital Sedimentary Rocks
From solid particles of mechanical & chemical weathering
Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
From dissolved materials of chemical weathering
8. 8 Detrital Rocks Predominantly Contain:
Clay minerals
Quartz
Feldspars & Micas
9. 9
10. 10 Grain size indicates energy of the transporting medium & of the depositional environment
Larger grains indicate higher energy
11. 11 Shale
Siltstone
Sandstone
Conglomerate/Breccia
12. 12 Very fine grained (clay particles)
Layered
Not well cemented
> Half of all sedimentary rocks, but does not form prominent outcrops
13. 13
14. 14
15. 15 Second most abundant sedimentary rock
20% of all sedimentary rocks
Can see the grains with unaided eye
Sorting
How similar the size of grains are
Wind sorts better than water
Waves sort better than stream flow
16. 16 SS predominantly quartz = Quartz SS
when referring to ss, we generally mean this
SS with at least 25% feldspars = Arkose
SS with quartz, feldspars, rock fragments and mud = Graywacke
17. 17 Predominantly gravels, sand & mud
Poorly sorted (many grain sizes)
Grains are rounded
Mountain streams / strong wave action
18. 18
19. 19 Also predominantly of gravels, sand & mud
Poorly sorted
Large particles are angular
Mountain streams / strong wave action
20. 20
21. 21 Chemical sediments derive from material carried in solution.
Mineral matter precipitates by
Inorganic processes (evaporation)
Organic (biochemical) processes (water-dwelling organisms cause the precipitation)
22. 22 Limestone
Dolostone
Chert
23. 23 10% of all sedimentary rocks
Most abundant chemical sed. rock
Consists mostly of calcite
Both inorganic and biochemical origin
Marine biochemical origin most common
24. 24 Coral Reefs
Coquina
Chalk
Inorganic limestones
Travertine
Oolitic limestone
Amongst others
25. 25
26. 26
27. 27
28. 28
29. 29 Consists of the mineral dolomite
Dolomite is a calcium-magnesium carbonate
Very similar in composition to limestone
Origin is not certain
30. 30 Made of microcrystalline silica (SiO2)
Skeletons of Diatoms & Radiolarians, some sponges
“Varieties”
Flint (contains organic matter, usually dark in color)
Jasper (red in color from iron oxide)
Agate (banded) (the book included it – agate generally forms from dissolved silica in other rocks)
31. 31
32. 32 From evaporation of sea water or groundwater
Halite (NaCl)
Common Table Salt
Gypsum (CaSO4.2H2O)
Plaster of Paris, Gypsum wallboards
33. 33
34. 34 Looking at it a different way: From a 1000-ft column of sea water, you will get:
1.2 inches of calcite
7 inches of gypsum
13 feet of halite
3 feet of potassium & magnesium salts
35. 35 There are beds of salt hundreds of feet thick
Think of how much water needs to be evaporated to produce them
36. 36 Coal is made from organic matter
Begins to form in bogs/swamps from dead plant matter
Very important energy source
Plentiful & Cheap
Pollution due to sulfur compounds
37. 37 Organic matter is buried in swamps
Swamp water is O2-deficient
Bacteria partly decomposes organic matter
O2 & H2 are released & Carbon accumulates
Bacteria dies off, resulting in Peat
Higher temps. cause further chemical reactions
38. 38 Detrital (Grain Size)
Coarse (>2mm)
Medium (1/16 - 2 mm)
Fine (1/256 - 1/16 mm)
Very Fine (< 1/256 mm)
39. 39 Clastic
Broken fragments cemented together
All detrital & some chemical rocks
Non-clastic or Crystalline
Minerals form a pattern of interlocking crystals, may resemble igneous rock
All are chemical rocks
40. 40
41. 41 Beaches
Spits
Sand dunes
42. 42 Continental
Marine
Transitional (Shoreline)
43. 43 Erosion & deposition are influenced by local climate
Streams (fluvial deposits)
Most common & most dominant
Stream channel, floodplain
Glacial
High Altitudes / Latitudes these days
Wind (eolian or aeolian deposits)
Arid regions
44. 44 Shallow Marine
Less than 200 m deep
From the shore to the edge of the continental shelf
Deep Marine
Deeper than 200 m
45. 45 Shallow Marine
Average width 80 km around continental margins
Receives a large amount of land-derived sediment
Carbonate-rich mud a predominant sediment if little land-derived sediment
Coral reefs in warm waters (tropics)
46. 46
The floors of the deep ocean
Fine-grained particles
Slow deposition
47. 47 Beaches
Tidal flats
Spits
48. 48 Facies - describes sets of lateral sediments (going in a line from the shore to the deeper water) with distinct characteristics that indicate their depositional environments
49. 49
50. 50 Strata or beds
Most important, common, characteristic feature of sedimentary rocks
Usually based on the texture & composition
Strata are separated by “bedding planes”
51. 51
52. 52 Cross bedding
sand dunes & river deltas
53. 53
54. 54 Graded bedding
coarse to fine (most common)
rarely fine to coarse
55. 55 Ripple marks
By the action of moving water or air
The ridges form at right angles to the direction
Symmetric and asymmetric
Fossils
Evidence of former life
56. 56
57. 57
58. 58 Mud cracks
59. 59