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Geological Oceanography Section II Lecture 1

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Title: Geological Oceanography Section II Lecture 1


1
Geological Oceanography Section II Lecture 1
  • Sources of Marine Sediments
  • Weathering
  • 7 February 2008

2
Mountains to Muds
How? Where? Why?
3
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4
Clastic sedimentation
5
How does a Geosystem work?
  • Holistic approach to sedimentation
  • Geology defines starting materials and context
  • Physics and chemistry define processes
  • Chemistry and biology define alterations
  • Biology builds and destroys
  • How do we pull all these parts together??

6
A Geologic Perspective...
  • What makes a sedimentary deposit?
  • Sediment
  • Deposition
  • What leads to deposition?
  • Decrease in competency of transport medium
  • Where do sediments come from?
  • Where do they go?

7
Geology - Materials and context
  • Source material
  • sediment production and characteristics
  • Tectonic setting
  • grade and slope
  • basins
  • Climate
  • Temperature
  • Precipitation
  • Interactions with physics, chemistry, biology

8
Geological Physiography
From Open University Press
Sediments move downslope
9
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10
Physics - How sediments move
  • Gravity, gravity, gravity and wind
  • River flow (unidirectional)
  • Winds (unidirectional)
  • Waves and tides (bidirectional)
  • Stratified flows
  • estuarine and shelf circulation
  • Density-driven flows

11
The predominant mechanism of weathering and
transport
12
Chemistry - Changing the rules
  • Dissolution and weathering
  • host rock, climate
  • Interaction of grains
  • flocculation of fine silts, clays
  • water chemistry
  • Precipitation and cementation
  • fluid chemistry and flow
  • authigenic sediments

13
Biology - A dose of the living
  • Influences physical and chemical weathering
  • Alters erosion rates
  • Influences transport
  • bed roughness elements
  • bioturbation
  • Sequestering sediments
  • wetlands, mats, lags, reefs
  • Production of sediments
  • shells, skeletal material (biogenic)
  • bioerosion (clastic or biogenic)

14
1. Pre-Phanerozoic before land vegetation
2. Paleozoic primitive land vegetation
3. Mesozoic flowering plants, pre-grasses
4. Cenozoic flowering plants and grasses
Relationship between precipitation and sediment
yield has changed through geologic time
15
Power of Erosion
  • At present rate of erosion, mass of materials
    carried to oceans by rivers would fill in ocean
    basins in 1 billion years (by)
  • At present rates of erosion, continents would be
    reduced to sea level in 100 my.
  • So, why do we still have continents if earth is
    4.8 by old?
  • Sediment recycling
  • Continental accretion--exotic terrains
  • Isostatic readjustments

16
Sedimentary cycle
  • Mountains are eroded
  • Weathering products are dispersed into oceans
  • Sediments are lithified, deformed and uplifted
    into mountain ranges by plate tectonics
  • New cycle of erosion begins

17
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18
Weathering
  • Sedimentary deposits and rocks are the result of
    weathering of pre-existing rocks
  • Including igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary
    rocks
  • Mechanical weathering
  • Disintegration of rocks into smaller particles of
    the same rock type
  • Chemical weathering
  • Changes chemical makeup of resulting sediments
  • Alters minerals to other minerals
  • Factors to consider
  • Climate (temperature, moisture), pore fluids,
    surface area
  • Composition of original rocks
  • Relative resistance of minerals to chemical
    alteration
  • Crystal sizes (e.g., intrusive vs. extrusive
    igneous rocks)
  • Biota

19
Mechanical Weathering
  • Abrasion grain to grain, ice to rock, etc.
  • Crystal formation, esp, ice and salts
  • Volumetric change from water to ice 9, salts
    5
  • Frost wedging increases with number of days
    freezing and thawing occur
  • Thermal expansion/contraction with diurnal
    heating and cooling
  • Expansion and contraction with wetting and drying
  • Pressure release as overlying layers are removed
    (exfoliation)

20
Mechanical Weathering
Ice gouged grooves in pillow lavas, Boulder Pass,
Glacier NP, MT
21
Mechanical Weathering
22
Mechanical Weathering - Exfoliation
Taken by Wing-Chi Poon on 2nd April 2005 in the
Enchanted Rock State Natural Area of Texas, USA.
The photo clearly shows the geological
exfoliation of granite dome rock.
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exfoliation
23
Mechanical Weatheringglacial erosion, transport,
deposition
Lake Grinnell, Glacier NP, Montana
24
Chemical weathering dissolution
  • Chemical reactions between minerals and water or
    acids
  • Example dissolution of limestone
  • H2O CO2 ?? H2CO3 ?? H HCO3-
  • CaCO3 H2CO3 ? Ca2 2HCO3-

Weathered Proterozoic stromatolitic
limestone, Glacier National Park, Montana
25
Chemical weathering hydrolysis
  • Replacement of cations in mineral structure by
    hydrogen ions
  • Releases cations to solution
  • Chemically changes original mineral to different
    mineral or dissolves completely
  • 2NaAlSi3O8 11H2O 2CO2 ? Al2Si2 O5(OH)4 2Na
    2HCO3- H4SiO4

kaolinite (clay mineral)
sodium feldspar
dissolved silica
26
Chemical weathering oxidation/reduction reactions
  • Oxidation atoms or ions lose electrons
  • Rusting Fe2 ? Fe3
  • Fe4SiO6 O2 8H2O ? 4Fe(OH)3 H4SiO4
  • Pyroxene to limonite clay and dissolved silica
  • CaCO3 H2CO3 ? Ca 2 2HCO3-
  • Reduction atoms or ions gain electrons
  • Fe3 ? Fe2
  • 2Fe(OH)3 3H2S ? 2FeS S 6H2O
  • Limonite plus hydrogen sulfide can yield pyrite
    and free sulfur
  • Can occur in anoxic environments

27
Chemical weathering hydration
  • Mineral reacts with water to create a hydrated
    mineral
  • CaSO4 2H2O ? CaSO4-2H2O
  • Anhydrite hydrates to gypsum
  • Fe2O3 3H2O ? 2Fe(OH)3
  • Hematite hydrates to limonite

H2O
28
Quartz crystals
  • Chemical weathering of an igneous rock
  • grain boundaries weaken and
  • the rock disintegrate into fragments

Granite
Quartz crystals become sand grains
29
Mineralogy and weathering
  • Mineral susceptibility to weathering
  • Function of availability of cations for
    hydrolysis or solution
  • Crystal size
  • Extrusive gtgt intrusive (of same mineralogy)
  • E.g., rhyolite will weather more quickly than
    granite
  • Crystal structure of silicates
  • Single tetrahedrongtchaingtsheetgtframework
  • Weathering susceptibility mirrors Bowens
    reaction series

30
Bowens reaction series
Most susceptible to chemical weathering
Most resistant to chemical weathering
http//hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/geophys
/bowen.html
31
Weathering and climate chemical weathering and
frost action require moisture
Revised from Peltier 1950, Annals, Association of
American Geographers. v. 40
32
Influence of vegetation
  • Roots, infaunal organisms, microbes
  • Mechanically erode
  • Chemically change interstitial environments
  • Production of reducing agents (organic matter)
  • Production of weak acids (e.g., by respiration)
  • CH2O O2 ? H2O CO2 ? H2CO3 ? H HCO3-
  • Hold sediments in place allowing prolonged
    chemical weathering
  • Mix sediments

33
Relative depth of weathering with climate and
vegetation assumes minimal relief
34
Granitic terrain in Brazil deeply weathered in
tropics, now denuded in arid climate
35
Persistence of important minerals with weathering
depth (after Wahlstrom 1948)
36
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37
Sediments classified by size
www-odp.tamu.edu/publications
38
Sedimentary Products of Weathering
39
Weathering and sand constituents
100 quartz chert
50
50
100 rock fragments
100 feldspar
50
40
Weathering and clays
100 kaolinite Al and Fe(Fe3) oxides
50
50
100 rock flour (chlorite)
100 illite
50
41
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42
Solution Load
43
Sediments reflect climatic conditions
(Schopf 1980)
44
What you now know about weathering
  • What is weathering?
  • What processes influence weathering?
  • What is the Sedimentary Cycle?
  • What are the major mechanical weathering
    processes?
  • What are the major chemical weathering processes?
  • What are the sedimentary products of weathering?

45
Web links to information on weathering processes
  • http//grunwald.ifas.ufl.edu/Nat_resources/weather
    ing/weathering.htm
  • http//www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/10r.
    html
  • http//soil.gsfc.nasa.gov/soilform/weather.htm
  • http//www.tulane.edu/sanelson/geol111/weathering
    .htm
  • http//www.geo.ua.edu/intro03/Eros.html
  • http//www.ndsu.nodak.edu/instruct/schwert/geosci/
    g120/wxing.htm
  • http//www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange1/cu
    rrent/lectures/soils/soils.html
  • http//www.stmarys.ca/conted/webcourses/GEO/GEO99/
    pubweather/overview.html

46
Web links to practice tests on weathering
  • http//geoweb.tamu.edu/courses/geol101/grossman/We
    athering.pp.html
  • http//www.ndsu.nodak.edu/instruct/schwert/geosci/
    g120/wxing.htm
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