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Sedimentary and Metamorphic Rocks. Sedimentary Rocks. Made from sediment / organic matter Rock goes through weathering and erosion, and is broken down into tiny fragments, some of which may be chemically altered Sediment Sediment is compacted and cemented
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Sedimentary Rocks • Made from sediment / organic matter • Rock goes through weathering and erosion, and is broken down into tiny fragments, some of which may be chemically altered • Sediment • Sediment is compacted and cemented • Squeezed together; dissolved minerals crystallize and act as “cement” to bond sediment together • COMPACTION AND LITHIFICATION
Classifying Sedimentary Rocks How do sedimentary rocks form? • Clastic • Sediment is compacted and cemented • Further classified by size of sediment grain • Sediment is held together by matrix material (“cement”) • Chemical; biogenic • Dissolved substances precipitate out of solution leaving a solid product OR • Made from organic matter • May CONTAIN FOSSILS! Tells about previous conditions on earth!
Depositional Environment • Sandstone – beaches, desert • Ripples, sand dune patterns in layers to determine which environment • Shale; mudstone – deep, calm water • Water must be deep, calm enough for fine sediment grains to deposit • Lake and ocean bottoms • Limestone – deepest water, coral reefs • Shelled organisms die, CaCO3 accumulates • Conglomerate – rivers; glaciers • Rivers transports differently-sized particles that deposit along shore, riverbed, etc.; cemented together with mud to form stone • Rivers can transport materials long distances • Coal – swamp • Halite – dried up body of salt water
Sedimentary rock samples (left; and sedimentary rocks in outcrop. Note the layers, or strata, that you can see in the sedimentary rock. C. Chesterman, 1979
Metamorphic Rocks Previous existing rocks that go through extreme T and P changes that chemically alters the rock (ROCK DOES NOT MELT) Contact metamorphism -- comes into contact with magma (small scale) Regional metamorphism -- large, extreme changes and deformation
Agents of Metamorphism • Heat • Magma • Change in location (depth) of rock • E.g. - Cookies! • Minerals become unstable and recrystallize • Heat is energy source that drives change • Pressure • Causes mineral grains to compact • Can create a new density or cause minerals to recrystallize • Hydrothermal solution • Hot water / mineral solutions that dissolve some substances in mineral, deposit new ones, causes change in composition
How Metamorphic Rocks are Classified • Degree of foliation • Minerals recrystallize, can be re-oriented • Appears layered / banded • Due to preferred orientation of mineral (stress and strain!)
Classification cont’d • Nonfoliated • Not banded • Usually only one mineral in rock composition
Metamorphism, Environment, and History • Rock type: type of metamorphism • Volcanism, mountain building • Parent rock type -- history • Shale / siltstone - slate -> schist -> gneiss with T or P • Sometimes just burial • Granite, Schist -> Gneiss……with intense T or P • Mountain building • Can determine direction of force from foliation • More T and P -> Melting of Gneiss….back to Granite! • Limestone -> marble • Sandstone -> quartzite • Organic coal -> anthracite coal (just burial…increased P, Low T)
Here are a few examples of metamorphic rocks (samples to the right, rock outcrop above). C. Chesterman, 1979