Title: Sedimentary Rocks
1Sedimentary Rocks
2Sedimentary Rocks
- Sediments pieces of solid material that have
been deposited on Earths surface by wind, water,
ice, gravity, or chemical precipitation. - When sediments become cemented together, they
form sedimentary rocks - The formation of sedimentary rocks begins when
weathering and erosion produce sediments
3Sedimentary Rocks
- Weathering
- Chemical weathering occurs when the minerals in a
rock are dissolved or otherwise chemically
changed. - Physical weathering occurs when fragments simply
break off the solid rock along fractures or grain
boundaries. During physical weathering, minerals
remain chemically unchanged
4Sedimentary Rocks
- Weathering
- Weathering produces rock and mineral fragments
known as clastic sediments. - Clastic sediments range in size from huge
boulders to microscopic particles. - Clastic sediments usually have worn surfaces and
rounded corners caused by physical abrasion
during erosion and transport.
5Sedimentary Rocks
Classification of Clastic Sediments
Particle Size Sediment Rock
gt256 mm 256-64 mm 64-2 mm Gravel Conglomerate
2-0.062 mm Sand Sandstone
0.062-0.0039 mm Silt Siltstone
lt0.0039 mm Clay Mudstone or shale
Boulder Cobble Pebble
6Sedimentary Rocks
- Erosion and Transport
- Erosion - the removal and movement of surface
materials from one location to another. - Four main agents of erosion wind, moving water,
gravity, and glaciers. - Eroded materials are almost always carried
downhill
7Sedimentary Rocks
- Erosion and Transport
- Deposition when sediments are laid down on the
ground or sink to the bottoms of bodies of water - Sediments in wind and water tend to form layers
when deposited largest particles at the bottom - Glaciers and landslides, however, move all
materials with equal ease
8Sedimentary Rocks
- Burial
- Most sediments are ultimately deposited on Earth
in depressions called sedimentary basins - Some sedimentary basins can contain layers of
sediment over 8 km thick - As more sediment is deposited in that area, the
bottom layers are subject to increasing pressure
and temperature
9Sedimentary Rocks
- Lithification
- The increasing temperature and pressure cause
lithification. - Lithification is the physical and chemical
processes that form sediments into sedimentary
rocks.
10Sedimentary Rocks
- Lithification
- Begins with compaction. The weight of overlying
sediments forces the sediment grains closer
together. - For example water is squeezed out of layers of
compacted mud. - Some sediments, such as sand, resist
lithification due to it being well-compacted
during deposition
11Sedimentary Rocks
- Cementation
- Sediments that are buried 3-4 km deep experience
temperatures that are high enough to start the
chemical changes that cause cementation. - Cementation occurs when mineral growth cements
sediments together into solid rock.
12Sedimentary Rocks
- Cementation
- Two common types of cementation
- First type occurs when a new mineral grows
between sediment grains as dissolved minerals
precipitate out of groundwater. (Calcite growing
between quartz grains) - Second type occurs when existing mineral grains
grow larger as more of the same mineral
precipitates from groundwater and crystallizes
around them. (quartz crystallizing around quartz
grains)
13Sedimentary Rocks
- Features
- Bedding the horizontal layering of sedimentary
rocks - Bedding can range from a millimeter-thick layer
of shale to a sandstone deposit several meters
thick - The type of bedding depends on the method of
transport.
14Sedimentary Rocks
- Features
- Graded Bedding
- Bedding in which the particle sizes become
progressively heavier and coarser towards the
bottom layers - Often observed in marine sedimentary rocks that
were deposited by underwater landslides
15Sedimentary Rocks
- Features
- Cross-bedding
- Formed as inclined layers of sediment move
forward across a horizontal surface. - Small-scale cross-bedding can be observed at
sandy beaches and along sandbars in streams and
rivers. - Most large-scale cross-bedding is formed by
migrating sand dunes
16Sedimentary Rocks
- Evidence of past life
- Fossils are the preserved remains, impressions,
or any other evidence of once-living organisms. - When an organism dies, it may be buried before it
decomposes - If its remains are further buried without being
disturbed, it might be preserved as a fossil.
17Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Classification of sedimentary rocks depends on
how they were formed. - Three main types clastic, organic, and chemical
18Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Clastic sedimentary rocks
- The most common type of sedimentary rock
- Formed from the abundant deposits of loose
sediments found on Earths surface - Clastic sedimentary rocks are further classified
according to the sizes of their particles.
19Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Coarse-grained clastics
- Sedimentary rocks consisting of gravel-sized rock
and mineral fragments - Conglomerates
- coarse-grained sedimentary rocks that have
rounded particles - Gravel is transported by high-energy flows of
water. - During transport, gravel becomes abraded and
rounded as the particles scrape against one
another
20Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Breccias
- Coarse-grained sedimentary rocks that have
angular particles - The sediments from which they formed did not have
time to become rounded. - This suggests that the particles were transported
only a short distance and deposited close to
their source.
21Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Medium-grained clastics
- Sedimentary rocks that contain sand-sized rock
and mineral fragments - When medium-sized sediments are buried and
lithified, sandstone is formed. - Sandstone has relatively high porosity the
percentage of open spaces between grains in a
rock - Sandstone often holds underground oil, natural
gas, or groundwater deposits due to its high
porosity.
22Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Fine-grained clastics
- Sedimentary rocks consisting of silt and mud
- Siltstone, mudstone, and shale
- Siltstone is mostly composed of silt-sized grains
- Shale is mostly composed of silt and clay-sized
particles - Shale has very low porosity it usually hinders
the movement of underwater liquids.
23Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Chemical sedimentary rocks
- During chemical weathering, minerals can be
dissolved and carried into lakes and oceans. - As water evaporates, the minerals are left behind.
24Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Also, when the concentration of dissolved
minerals in a body of water reaches saturation,
crystal grains precipitate out of solution and
settle to the bottom - The layers of chemical sedimentary rocks that
form as a result of this process are called
evaporites - The three most common evaporites are calcite,
halite, and gypsum
25Types of Sedimentary Rocks
- Organic sedimentary rocks
- Formed from the remains of once-living things
- The most abundant organic sedimentary rock is
limestone. - Formed from the shells of ancient shell fish
- Coal is also an organic sedimentary rock
- Formed from the remains of ancient plants