Title: Sedimentary Rocks and Sedimentary Environments
1Sedimentary Rocks andSedimentary Environments
2So, what do we get from weathering?
- Big rocks break into smaller rocks and grains
- Clast is a general term
- (fine material sediment)
- If still large enough, clasts may contain more
than one mineral - Small clasts are generally only one mineral
cobbles
sand grains
Size of clasts
3Clast Size terms
- Clay (refers to a specific mineral that is often
very fine grained, AND to any very fine grains) - Silt almost all quartz
- Sand quartz with some other minerals
- Pebbles variable mineralogy
- Cobbles variable mineralogy
- Boulders variable mineralogy
Size of clasts
4So, what do we get from weathering?
- Some minerals are not very stable
- They may dissolve
- Or break down to form other minerals
- Oxidation gt rusty red minerals
- Hydrolysis gt clay minerals
oxidation
clay
Composition
5Goldichs weathering series
Composition
6Big picture
7Stream load
8Settling velocity
low energy
high energy
9Big picture (continued)
weathering and erosion
clastic material dissolved material biological
material
transportation
deposition
gravity chem. precipitation
lithification
10The book sort of combines chemical and biological
11The most common sedimentary minerals in clastic
rocks
Why?
Quartz grains in a sandstone
2 mm
Shales are almost entirely made of Clay, but the
grains are too small To see
12Olivine beach - Hawaii
13What kind of sediment collects . . .
- On mountain sides
- Near glaciers
- In sand dunes
- Along rivers
- In lakes
- At deltas
- On beaches
- In lagoons
- In wetlands
- Near reefs
Oysters, Mancos Shale
14Kinds of sedimentary rocks
rock salt
- Clastic
- Chemical
- Biological
sandstone
limestone
15Kinds of sedimentary rocks
rock salt
- Clastic
- Chemical
- Biological
sandstone
limestone
16Deposition in layers
- Bed relatively uniform layer
- E.g., the limestone bed
- Strata an identifiable layer
- May be smaller than a bed
- Formation a rock stratigraphic unit that has
particular characteristics that allow it to be
identified in different places. - May not be completely homogeneous
17Grand Canyon
18Grand Canyon Rim
19Supai Group
20Massive layers
21Interbedded layers
22Laminated rocks
23Examples of sedimentary rocks
- Breccia
- Conglomerate
- Sandstone
- Shale, etc
- Carbonate
- Evaporite
Almost all clastic material
Generally little clastic material
24Carbonate rocks
- Called limestone or dolostone
- Or, generically, just limestone
- Most form by precipitation of calcium carbonate
from seawater - Generally in moderate to deep ocean basins
- A few are freshwater
- Some are reef deposits (organic)
- Some contain clastic components
25Evaporite rocks
- From by evaporation of ocean waters
- Gypsum gt gyp rock
- Halite gt rock salt
26Examples of sedimentary rocks
- Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
- Breccia
- Conglomerate
- Sandstone
- Shale, etc
- Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
- Carbonate
- Evaporite
27Kinds of Sedimentary Rocks
- Clastic
- Chemical
- Biological
coal
coquina
28Kinds of Sedimentary Rocks
shale
conglomerate
sandstone
29Kinds of Sedimentary Rocks
- 1. Clastic rocks
- 2. Chemical sedimentary rocks
Limestone with fossils
evaporite
evaporite
Rock salt
Gyp rock
30Salt flats
Halite deposits
31Gypsum precipitates
Gypsum in red soil
32Kinds of Sedimentary Rocks
lignite (coal)
- 1. Clastic rocks
- 2. Chemical sedimentary rocks
- 3. Biological sedimentary rocks
anthracite (coal)
Coquina beach rock
Limestone (petrified reef)
33Examples of sedimentary rocks
- Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
- Breccia
- Conglomerate
- Sandstone
- Shale, etc
- Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
- Carbonate
- Evaporite
- Biological Sedimentary Rocks
- Coal
- Coquina
Named according to grain size and shape
Named according to composition
34Why do we have different kinds of sedimentary
rocks on top of each other?
- Change in the environment of deposition
- a facies change
35Transgression and regression
- Transgression increase in ocean depth
- Regression decrease in ocean depth
36(relative) sea level changes
- Due to climate change
- Uplift of continents
- Downdropping of continents
- Depth of water may change
- Areas may become dry land
- Dry land may flood
37Sedimentary facies
- Facies environment of deposition
- Different kinds of sediment deposited in
different places at the same time
38Characteristics of different facies