1 / 33

Sedimentation & Stratigraphy (89.352)

Sedimentation & Stratigraphy (89.352). http:// faculty.uml.edu/lweeden/SedStrat.htm. Brief History of Sedimentation and Stratigraphy Nicolas Steno (1638 – 1686)  Principles of Superposition and Original Horizontality.

rogan-bray
Download Presentation

Sedimentation & Stratigraphy (89.352)

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. Sedimentation & Stratigraphy (89.352) http://faculty.uml.edu/lweeden/SedStrat.htm

  2. Brief History of Sedimentation and Stratigraphy Nicolas Steno (1638 – 1686) Principles of Superposition and Original Horizontality. James Hutton (1727 – 1797) Principle of Uniformitarianism (aka. Actualism) William “Strata” Smith (1769 – 1839) Law of Faunal Succession. Johannes Walther (1860 – 1937) Walther’s Law of succession of facies

  3. Chapter 1: Weathering and Soils • I. Physical Weathering • . Freeze – Thaw (Frost Wedging) • . Insolation Weathering • . Salt Weathering • . Wetting & Drying Weathering • . Stress Release Weathering • . Other Physical Process • How does surface area contribute to weathering processes?

  4. Frost Wedging

  5. Insolation Weathering (Spalling)

  6. Salt Weathering

  7. Wetting and Drying Weathering

  8. Stress – Release Weathering

  9. II. Chemical Weathering (Table 1.1) • . Simple Solution • . Hydrolysis • . Oxidation / Reduction • . Hydration / Dehydration • . Ion Exchange • . Chelation

  10. III. Weathering Rates • There is no mathematical solution to precise weathering rates. It is all relative…. • . Climate (physical - cold and dry; chemical – hot and wet.) • . Stability of Minerals “Happiness Principle” Table 1.2 • . Subaerial Weathering (Table 1.3) • . Submarine Weathering • .Halmyrolysis 2.Magnitude of Circulation and effects.

  11. Physical weathering dominates in cold and dry climates. Chemical weathering dominates in warm and wet climates.

  12. Stability of Minerals and “The Happiness Principle”

  13. Order of increasing “weatherability”

  14. Table 1.2

  15. Subaerial Weathering (Table 1.3)

  16. Submarine Weathering and Halmyrolysis

  17. IV. Soils • . Soil is a product of bedrock weathering. • . The thickness and characteristics of a soil is a function of: • . Bedrock lithology • . Slope of bedrock surface • . Climate • . Biological activity • . Additions to ground surface • . Transformation • . Transfers • . Removals • . Bioturbation of Soils

  18. Soil-Forming Processes 1. Additions to the ground surface—Precipitation of dissolved ions in rainwater; influx of solid particles (dust, etc.); addition of organic matter from surface vegetation (leaf litter, etc .) 2. Transformations a. Decomposition of organic matter with soils to produce organic compounds. b. Weathering of primary minerals; formation of secondary minerals, including iron oxides. 3. Transfers a. Movement of solid or suspended material downward from one soil horizon to a lower horizon by groundwater percolation (eluviation) b. Accumulation of soluble or suspended material in a lower horizon (illuviation) c. Transfer of ions upward by capillary movement of water and precipitation of ions in the soil profile

  19. Soil forming processes continued… 4. Removals—Removal of substances still in solution to become part of the dissolved constituents in groundwater or surface water 5. Bioturbation of soil—Soil disrupted by animals (i.e. ants and termites) and plants.

  20. G.Soil Profile Bedrock

  21. Water enters system Minerals leached Altered minerals accumulated with different chemistry than original material

  22. Gelisols Histosols Spodosols Andisols Oxisols Vertisols Aridisols Ultisols Mollisols Alfisols Inceptisols Entisols H. Soil Classification (Taxonomy)

  23. Review climatic effects of soil formation.

  24. I. Paleosols—ancient soils, fossil soils or soils that escaped the effects of erosion to become part of the sedimentary record.

  25. Recognition of Paleosoils –Glaebules, Mottles & Burrows…Oh my!

  26. See Figure 1.6 of Text

More Related