Title: Mudrocks, Organic Deposits, and other
1Mudrocks, Organic Deposits, and other Rare
Sediments
2MudrocksSilts and Clays
- Formed from weathering of primary
- Minerals
- Accounts for 60 of all siliclastic
- sedimentary rocks
- Most form from in soils upon continents
- Some form from alteration by ground-
- And marine waters
3Silts Eolian Deposition
Air-borne Silts in a Dust Storm
4Dust Storm
Stratford, TX 1935 The Dust Bowl Era
5Extended periods of Dust Storm events can lead to
significant
accumulation of silts, especially in low areas
6Pleistocene-age accumulation of silts in the
central U.S.A.
Requires fairly dry climate, wind, and a lot of
silt size material
7When Silt size dust accumulates as sediment, it
is called LOESS.
Loess in Nepal
8Pleistocene Loess mantles the landscape in parts
of Iowa, U.S.A.
Loess Layer
River Gravels, See the Channel?
9Early Permian Halgaito Fm., Southeastern Utah,
U.S.A. Is made mostly of silt, so it may be a
loessite
10Late Pennsylvanian-age Maroon Fm. Colorado, U.S.A.
Loessite
11Bentonites
Altered volcanic ash-fall deposits
12Bentonites
13Bentonites
Bentonites are mostly preserved in low areas
14Bentonites
15- Alteration of Volcanic Ashes releases silica
- Into solution, leaving montmorillonite
- Toothpaste
- Paint
- Filler
- Drilling Muds
What becomes of the free silica?
16Some of the free silica is used to
form DIATOMITES AND DIATOMACEOUS EARTH
17DIATOMS are single-celled photosynthesizers that
use silica in solution to make a skeleton
DIATOM skeletons are made of a mineralloid
called opal-A.
18Opal-A is amorphous silica with lots of Waters
of hydration SiO2nH2O
Although soft and not chemically stable Opal-A
is beautiful and used in jewelery
19When Opal-A is buried, put under pressure From
overlying sedi- ments and heated, waters of
hydration are expelled to form Microcrystalline
quartz, or chert SiO2
20ORGANIC MATTER IN THE SEDIMENTARY RECORD
- Of all Siliciclastics, mudrocks hold the largest
amount of O.M. - Most Mudrocks have 2 O.M. by weight
- 3 kinds of Organic Matter
- Humus soil organic matter
- Peat organic matter accumulated in fresh or
brackish H2O - Sapropel low-oxygen environments, finely
disseminated
21Black Shales 3 to 10 weight Organic
matter Incorporate sapropellic organic matter
Black Shales accumulate in sluggish, poorly
circulated marine Environments (anoxia).
Abundant in Earths Past.
22Epieric Seas
23Oil Shales
- 25 weight organic matter
- Almost all of the O.M. is kerogen, derived from
ALGAE - Cracks to give petroleum at 350 degrees
Celcius - Not all are shales because many deposits are
formed in - Fine-grained carbonate
- Important source of Energy around the world
24The Most Famous Oil Shale you might know Is the
Eocene-age Green River Formation
A big lake system in Colorado, Wyoming, and Parts
of Utah. Alternating periods of algal Blooms and
carbonate precipitation from the Water column.
Anoxic bottom water resulted In exquisitely
preserved fossil fish and plants
25Coals
Coals Have greater than 70 organic
Carbon Derived almost entirely of plant O.M, so
it is Dominantly Peat-type organic matter
26Coal Ranking
Peat No Rank, unconsolidated, semi-carbonized
plant remains with high moisture content. Not
Coal Lignite lowest rank. Brown to
brownish-black coals with high water content and
commonly reatins much of the structures of the
woody plant fragments. Subbituminous coals
between lignite and bituminous coal Bituminous
coals hard, black coals with very little water
and high C content. Alternating brown and black
bands.
27Anthracite Hard, black, glassy and dense coal
with gt90 Carbon. Exhibits conchoidal fracture.
Typically only found in very ancient coals
(Carboniferous-age).
28Banded Iron Formations
Preserve record of important event in Earth
history Important source of industrial iron.
29Banded Iron Formations
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