200 likes | 358 Views
How do the three main types of rocks form?. Chapter Introduction. Rocks and the Rock Cycle. How are rocks classified? What is the rock cycle?. Lesson 1 Reading Guide - KC. Rocks and the Rock Cycle. rock grain texture magma. lava sediment rock cycle. Lesson 1 Reading Guide - Vocab.
E N D
How do the three main types of rocks form? Chapter Introduction
Rocks and the Rock Cycle • How are rocks classified? • What is the rock cycle? Lesson 1 Reading Guide - KC
Rocks and the Rock Cycle • rock • grain • texture • magma • lava • sediment • rock cycle Lesson 1 Reading Guide - Vocab
Rocks • A rock is a natural, solid mixture of minerals or grains. • Geologists call the fragments that make up a rock grains. • Geologists use a grain’s size, shape, and chemical composition to classify rocks. • Earth’s surface can cause rocks to break apart into many different-sized fragments. Lesson 1-1
Rocks(cont.) • The grain size and the way grains fit together in a rock are called texture. • When a geologist classifies a rock by its texture, he or she looks at the size of minerals or grains in the rock, the arrangement of these grains, and the overall feel of the rock. • Texture can be used to determine the environment in which a rock formed. Lesson 1-1
Rocks(cont.) • The minerals orgrains in a rock help geologists classify its composition. • Composition can be used to determine where a rock formed, such as inside a volcano or in a river. Nancy Simmerman/Getty Images Lesson 1-1
Rocks(cont.) How are rocks classified? Lesson 1-1
Three Major Rock Types • The three major groups of rocks are igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks. • When magma or lava cools and crystallizes, it creates igneous rock. • Magma is molten or liquid rock underground. • Lava is magma that erupts on Earth’s surface. Lesson 1-2
Three Major Rock Types (cont.) • Rock fragments, mineral crystals, or the remains of certain plants and animals, are the building blocks of sedimentary rocks. • Sedimentary rocks form where sediment is deposited. • Sediment is rock material that forms where rocks are broken down into smaller pieces or dissolved in water as rocks erode. Lesson 1-2
Three Major Rock Types (cont.) Sediment can be deposited in environments like rivers and streams, deserts, and valleys. deposit Science Use sediment or rock added to a landform Common Use to put money in a bank Lesson 1-2
Three Major Rock Types (cont.) • Metamorphic rocks can form from any igneous or sedimentary rock or even another metamorphic rock. • When rocks are exposed to extreme temperature and pressure, such as along plate boundaries, they can change to metamorphic rocks. • Chemical fluids can also cause rocks to become metamorphic rocks. Lesson 1-2
The Rock Cycle The series of processes that change one type of rock into another type of rock is called the rock cycle. Lesson 1-2
The Rock Cycle (cont.) • Forces on Earth’s surface and deep within Earth drive the rock cycle. • On the surface, rocks can change due to natural processes, such as weathering, erosion, deposition, compaction, and cementation. Lesson 1-3
The Rock Cycle (cont.) • Some rock cycle processes occur only beneath Earth’s surface, such as those that involve extreme temperature, pressure, and melting. • Uplift is a tectonic process that forces these rocks onto Earth’s surface. Lesson 1-3
The Rock Cycle (cont.) What is the rock cycle? Lesson 1-2
Rocks are a natural solid mixture of minerals or grains. • Texture describes the size and arrangement of minerals or grains in a rock. Nancy Simmerman/Getty Images Lesson 1 - VS
The rock cycle represents a series of processes that change one rock type into another. Lesson 1 - VS
What do geologists call the fragments that make up a rock? A. minerals B. magma C. igneous rock D. grains Lesson 1 – LR1
What is rock material that forms where rocks are broken down into smaller pieces by water erosion? A. lava B. sediment C. metamorphic rock D. magma Lesson 1 – LR2
When rocks are exposed to extreme temperature and pressure they can change into which of these? A. metamorphic rock B. igneous rock C. sedimentary rock D. volcanic rock Lesson 1 – LR3