Title: University of Puerto Rico Mayag
1University of Puerto RicoMayagüez
CampusDepartment of Geology Sedimentary
Environments and Lithogenesis GEOL-4046 Dr.
Hernán Santos Office F-412, ext. 3583Office
Hours Monday and Wednesday835-1135 AM
- Sec-070 Room 201
- Prerequisite Geol 3056
2Objective of courseThis courses provide the
students with the knowledge to identify
sedimentary rocks, sedimentary structures, to
understand the processes of erosion,
transportation, and deposition, and to associate
the rocks to environments of deposition.
3Description of the course
- Introduction to the processes of sedimentary rock
formation, including the weathering of rocks, and
the transportation, deposition, and lithification
of sediments. - Emphasis on the field study of diverse modern
sedimentary environments and classification of
sedimentary rocks based on petrographic analysis.
4Sedimentary Environments and Lithogenesis(99.35,
University Bookstore)Text Book Sedimentary
Geology, 2nd Ed.Author Donald R. Prothero and
Fred SchwabEdit. House Freeman1st
Exam September 28 Sedimentary Rocks An
Introduction Chapter 2- Weathering Chapter
3- Clastic Transport and Fluid Flow Chapter 5-
Sandstones and Conglomerates Chapter 6-
Mudrocks 2nd Exam November 2 Chapter 8-
Terrestial Sedentary Environments Chapter 9-
Coastal Environments Chapter 10- Silisiclastic
Marine and Pelagic Env. 3rd Exam Day of
Final Exam Chapter 11-Carbonates Rocks Chapter
12- Carbonate Environments Chapter 13-Other
Biogenic Sedimentary Rocks Chapter 14-Chemical
and Non-Epiclastic Sedimentary Rocks
5Grading
- The final grade of the class will consist of 60
class grade - 3 partial exams
- A Final Report
- A total of 400 points
- 40 laboratory grade.
6Final Report
- Topics (examples)
- Microbial build-ups
- Deltas
- Eolian systems
- Eruption processes and facies
- Glaciers and glaciers deposits
- Volcanic eruption processes and facies
- Deep water processes and products
- Shallow water carbonates
- Lacustrine processes and deposits
- Reef structures and sediments
- Sept 15 Topic of report and 3 references
- 7 to 15 pages including figures and 3 references
- 3-7 references
- Should include
- title page
- Index
- Introduction
- body
- references
- numbered pages
7Sedimentary Rocks an Introduction
- Sedimentology- the study of the processes that
erode, transport, and deposit sediments. - Sedimentary petrology- the characteristics and
origins of sedimentary rocks.
8Analysis of sedimentary rocks involvesdescriptio
n and interpretation
- We will learn to describe sedimentary rocks
- Look for characteristics that will help us to
determine the environment of deposition.
9Conglomerate
- Composed of pebbles of preexisting rocks and
minerals. Clasts-broken fragments. - Color.
- Composition of clasts of rocks and minerals.
- Texture- refers to the size, shape, arrangement
of the grains the make up the rock. - Roundness
10Texture
- Clastic- composed of individual fragments that
were transported and deposited as particles. - Crystalline- results from the in situ
precipitation of solid mineral crystals.
11Texture- refers to the size, shape, arrangement
of the grains the make up the rock.
- Grain size- grain diameter (boulders, pebbles,
cobbles, sand, silt, or clay). - Shape- is described in terms of sphericity
- Roundness or (angularity) refers to the sharpness
or smoothness of their corners.
12Sedimentary Structures
- Large scale, three-dimensional features of
sedimentary rocks best studied in outcrops - The most important is stratification- the banding
or layering exhibited by as consequences of
deposition of the clasts grain by grain over
time. - Ripple marks, raindrop imprints, mud cracks,
cross-bedding, ripple marks.
13Fossil content
- Sedimentary rocks often contains organic remains,
either hard parts (shells, bones, or their
replacement) or trace of organism such as tracks,
trails, burrows (ichnofossils).
14Sedimentary rock Interpretation A case study
- What do we really want to know about any
sedimentary rock? - What information can be inferred from each of the
physical characteristics? - We seek the answer to rather simple questions.
15We seek the answer to rather simple questions.
- 1. When was the sedimentary rock unit deposited,
and over how broad a region? - 2. With what other rock units is the sedimentary
rock contemporaneous? - 3. From what kinds of source rocks were the
sediments derived? - 4. Where was that source located? Was it near or
far from the depositional site, and in what
direction?
16- 5. Was the source a mountainous highland or an
area of low relief? - 6. How was the material transported to the
depositional site from the area where it was
weathered and eroded? Was it blown by the wind,
bounced along the channel of flowing river, moved
by the surf and longshore currents, or carried by
a sheet of slow-moving glacial-ice? - 7. In what kind of physical setting did the
sedimentary rock form? Was it deposited by an
ancient river delta system? Is it a lithified
desert dune complex?
17- 8. How have the color, composition, texture, and
other physical properties of the sedimentary rock
been modified in the time since deposition? - Answering these questions helps us understand the
genesis of a sedimentary rock. Answers to such
questions are formally embodied as stratigraphy,
provenance, dispersal, transporting agent,
depositional setting, paleo-geography,
sedimentary tectonics, and diagenesis.