Title: Rock types
1Rock types
- Igneous
- Sedimentary
- Metamorphic
2Differences in the rock textures
3Differences in the rock textures
- Sedimentary rocks have layers, bedding, strata
4Differences in the rock textures
- Metamorphic rocks are banded, and foliated
5metamorphic rocks
- Re crystallization of sedimentary or igneous
rocks or even other metamorphic rocks - In solid state (not liquid)
6Metamorphism
- Due to
- High pressure
- High temperature
- Liquid in pores
7Metamorphic temperatures
- Lower boundary ca 150 Celcius
- Upper boundary ca 1200 Celcius Above this
temperature the rock mass will melt and form
igneous rocks
8Result of metamorphism
- new minerals grow
- minerals deform and rotate
- re crystallization of course minerals
- rocks become either
- stronger but more brittle
- or
- weaker and anisotropic
9?What is the difference between metamorphism,
diagenesis and chemical weathering?
- Â metamorphism entails high temperature and high
pressure - diagenesis entails a bonding and hardening of a
sediment relatively near the earths surface - weathering entails the disruption and
alteration of a solid rock at or near the earth
surface
10high pressure
11Thin section of mica schist
12Types of metamorphic rocks
- Regionala metamorphism - high pressure
- Contact metamorphism high temperature due to
igneous intrusion
13Regionala metamorphism
14Contact metamorf
15Contact metamorphism
16Textur
- Foliated preferred direction of minerals or
banding - Non foliated no preferred direction
17metamorphic textures
- mosaic texture interlocking equigranular grains
(fig 8.1) - porphoblstic texture larger minerals in a fine
matrix (fig 8.2)
- folitation anisotropy, strong directional
structure which effects the properties of the
rock so they are different in different directions
18Foliation types
- fracture cleavage strong rock between
fractures, evenly spaced, low grade metamorphism - slaty cleavage parallel to mineral plates,
often mica - bedding cleavage when slaty cleavage coincides
with bedding - schistosity is foliation developed by
non-random orientation of macroscopic minerals - lepidoblastic schistosity flat mineral plates
parallel to on another - nemotablastic schistosity elongate minerals in
one plane but not parallel to one another in the
plane
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20Foliation types
- fracture cleavage strong rock between
fractures, evenly spaced, low grade metamorphism - slaty cleavage parallel to mineral plates,
often mica - bedding cleavage when slaty cleavage coincides
with bedding - schistosity is foliation developed by
non-random orientation of macroscopic minerals - lepidoblastic schistosity flat mineral plates
parallel to on another - nemotablastic schistosity elongate minerals in
one plane but not parallel to one another in the
plane
21Foliation types
- fracture cleavage strong rock between
fractures, evenly spaced, low grade metamorphism - slaty cleavage parallel to mineral plates,
often mica - bedding cleavage when slaty cleavage coincides
with bedding - schistosity is foliation developed by
non-random orientation of macroscopic minerals - lepidoblastic schistosity flat mineral plates
parallel to on another - nemotablastic schistosity elongate minerals in
one plane but not parallel to one another in the
plane
22Preferred directions
23banding and other structures
- bands segregation of different minerals in
distinct bands - augen german for eye refers to the growth
porphyroblasts, large crystals, in the otherwise
finer matrix around which the banding is bent so
an eye shape is formed - boudinage French for sausage is a term for a
structure where one layer, which is more brittle
than the surrounding layers, is broken into
segments around which the other more plastic rock
fill in the voids. This forms a series of boudin.
(fig 8.4) - lineations a linear structure, deferrers from
foliation in that it is a sub texture of the main
metamorphic texture. All linear structure are
oriented parallel
24banding and other structures
- bands segregation of different minerals in
distinct bands - augen german for eye refers to the growth
porphyroblasts, large crystals, in the otherwise
finer matrix around which the banding is bent so
an eye shape is formed - boudinage French for sausage is a term for a
structure where one layer, which is more brittle
than the surrounding layers, is broken into
segments around which the other more plastic rock
fill in the voids. This forms a series of boudin.
(fig 8.4) - lineations a linear structure, deferrers from
foliation in that it is a sub texture of the main
metamorphic texture. All linear structure are
oriented parallel
25banding and other structures
- bands segregation of different minerals in
distinct bands - augen german for eye refers to the growth
porphyroblasts, large crystals, in the otherwise
finer matrix around which the banding is bent so
an eye shape is formed - boudinage French for sausage is a term for a
structure where one layer, which is more brittle
than the surrounding layers, is broken into
segments around which the other more plastic rock
fill in the voids. This forms a series of boudin.
(fig 8.4) - lineations a linear structure, deferrers from
foliation in that it is a sub texture of the main
metamorphic texture. All linear structure are
oriented parallel
26banding and other structures
- bands segregation of different minerals in
distinct bands - augen german for eye refers to the growth
porphyroblasts, large crystals, in the otherwise
finer matrix around which the banding is bent so
an eye shape is formed - boudinage French for sausage is a term for a
structure where one layer, which is more brittle
than the surrounding layers, is broken into
segments around which the other more plastic rock
fill in the voids. This forms a series of boudin.
(fig 8.4) - lineations a linear structure, deferrers from
foliation in that it is a sub texture of the main
metamorphic texture. All linear structure are
oriented parallel
27Most common metamorphic rock types
28Metamorphic grade
- Pressure and temperature together results in
changes such as the growth of minerals and
textures - Indicator minerals show which temperature and
pressure the rock has undergone
29Indication minerals
30Mineral associations - facies
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32Weathering of metamorphic rocks
- Wide range of weathering products
- gneiss, granulites and other quartz rich rocks
sandy residual soils smilar to granitic soils - slate and phyllite miaceous, silty residual
soils - marble red clay
- foliation bladed outcrops tombstone rock head
separated by completely decomposed material - banded banded saprolite with clay between bands
- weathering depth dependent upon spacing of
fractures, typical 6 to 24 m depth
33joints
- sets of 4 or more are common
- joints coated with clay or silt
- intersections isolate potentially removable
blocks (fig 8.12)
34foliation shears
- persistent shear zones parallel to the plane of
foliation, cm to m in size - tensile and shear strengths are considerably less
than in all other directions, strength anisotropy - characterized by finely fractured or crushed rock
- two end members
- impervious - plastic clay seam common, alteration
to chlorite or kaolinite replacing feldspars and
biotite - pervious - shear zone of crushed rock
35Engineering and metamorphic rocks
36Exploration
- irregular extent
- recognition of rock types
- foliation directions important
- weathering zones detection
- geophysical methods
- drilling (difficult in quartzite)
37slope stability
- Landslides
- common due to extremely weak shear strengths of
platy minerals - valley form asymetrical
- gentle - dip slip slopes slab slide
- steep slopes with creep, toppling, landslides
38surface excavation
- blasting often required
- landslide risk block theory
- slab slides
- toppling
39foundations
- fresh rock usually good
- weathered rock
- compressible sandy silty soil
- pile difficult
- saprolite protect from drying loose of fabric
- slope failures common along the plain of
foliation
40Case histories
- Several in the book
- Read do you understand the descriptions of the
rock and their physical nature?