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Sedimentary Rocks

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Terminology Sedimentary Rock ... Cementation Cementation- Refers to the glue (cement) that holds the sediments together) For the most part, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sedimentary Rocks


1
Sedimentary Rocks
2
Terminology
  • Sedimentary Rock - a rock formed through the
    deposition of sediments from weathering or
    biologic activity.
  • Diagenesis- Refers to all the chemical, physical,
    and biological changes that occur after sediment
    is deposited and before and after lithification
  • Lithification - The process by which
    unconsolidated sediments are transformed into
    sedimentary rocks.

3
Lithification
  • Two Processes control Lithification Compaction
    and Cementation
  • Compaction- As sediment accumulates the weight of
    the overlying material compresses the lower
    levels.
  • This leads to a reduction in pore space (Imagine
    a garbage compressor)
  • The size and shape of the grains that make up the
    sediment will directly determine the amount of
    compaction that occurs.
  • Sands and other course-grained sediment are less
    compressible than fine grained sediments such as
    clay.

4
Cementation
  • Cementation- Refers to the glue (cement) that
    holds the sediments together)
  • For the most part, cementing materials are the by
    product of chemical weathering (They are the
    dissolved components of other rocks).
  • Important Cementing agents
  • Calcite (CaCO3)
  • Silica (SiO4)
  • Iron Oxide (Fe2O3, FeO)
  • These materials precipitate out of solution and
    become deposited within the pore spaces between
    the sediment grains

5
Types of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Detrital- Accumulated material that is
    transported as solid particles that originated
    from chemical or mechanical weathering.
  • Chemical- Formed as previously dissolved minerals
    precipitate out of solution.

6
Identification of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Detrital sedimentary rocks are identified by both
    their composition and their grain size
  • Chemical Sedimentary rocks are classified by
    their chemical composition

7
Sedimentary Environments
  • Sedimentary rocks form in many different
    depositional environments ie. beaches, oceans,
    mountains
  • Each area depositing a similar material is
    considered a sedimentary facies.
  • As we move from the Continental Environment to
    the Marine Environment there will be a gradual
    transition between the facies due to the matter
    of transport and other factors affecting
    deposition.

8
Grain Size vs. Sedimentary Environment
  • Detrital grain size gives some indication of the
    energy conditions during transport and deposition
  • High-energy processes such as swift-flowing
    streams and waves are needed to transport large
    grains such as gravel
  • Conglomerate (composed mostly of gravel) must
    have been deposited in areas of high energy
  • Sand transport also requires vigorous currents
  • Silt and clay are transported by weak currents
    and and therefore only accumulate under
    low-energy conditions such as in lakes and lagoons

9
Examples of Sed. Facies
10
Continental Environments
  • Dominated by erosion and deposition associated
    with streams
  • Channel Deposits
  • Alluvial Fans
  • Flood Plains
  • In colder areas glacial movement takes the place
    of rivers and streams
  • Morrains
  • In more arid areas wind is the more dominant
    factor
  • Dunes
  • Playa Lakes

11
Transitional Environments (the shore line)
  • Beaches
  • Tidal flats
  • Lagoons
  • Spits, bars and barrier islands

12
Marine
  • Divided according to depth
  • Shallow Marine-
  • reaches to depths of about 200 meters (700ft)
  • Extends from the shore to the outer edge of the
    continental shelf
  • In some areas can reach up to 1500km, however,
    average is about 80 km
  • Types of sediment deposited depend on several
    factors
  • Distance from shore
  • Elevation of adjacent land
  • Water depth
  • Water temperature
  • Climate

13
Deep Marine
  • Seaward of the continental shelf and reaches
    depth greater than 200 m
  • Deposition in these environments are composed of
    tiny particles that drift in the ocean current as
    well as skeletal remains of microscopic animals
    such as diatoms.

14
Sorting and Rounding
  • Sorting and rounding are two textural features of
    detrital sedimentary rocks that aid in
    determining depositional processes
  • Sorting refers to the variation in size of
    particles making up sediment or sedimentary rocks
  • It results from processes that selectively
    transport and deposit sediments of particular
    sizes

15
Sorting
  • If the size range is not very great, the sediment
    or rock is well sorted
  • If they have a wide range of sizes, they are
    poorly sorted
  • For example
  • Wind has a limited ability to transport sediment
    so dune sand tends to be well sorted
  • Glaciers can carry any sized particles, because
    of their transport power, so glacier deposits are
    poorly sorted

16
Rounding
  • Rounding is the degree to which detrital
    particles have their sharp corners and edges warn
    away by abrasion
  • Gravel in transport is rounded very quickly as
    the particles collide with one another
  • Sand becomes rounded with considerably more
    transport

17
Rounding and Sorting
  • A deposit of well rounded and well sorted gravel
  • Angular, poorly sorted gravel

18
Sedimentary Structures
  • Sedimentary structures are visible features that
    formed at the time of deposition or shortly
    thereafter
  • Represent manifestations of the physical and
    biological processes that operated in
    depositional environments
  • Structures seen in present-day environments or
    produced in experiments help provide information
    about depositional environments of rocks with
    similar structures

19
Bedding
  • Sedimentary rocks generally have bedding or
    stratification
  • Individual layers less than 1 cm thick are
    laminations
  • common in mudrocks
  • Beds are thicker than 1 cm
  • common in rocks with coarser grains

20
Graded Bedding
  • Some beds show an upward gradual decrease in
    grain size, known as graded bedding
  • Graded bedding is common in turbidity current
    deposits
  • form when sediment-water mixtures flow along the
    seafloor
  • As they slow, the largest particles settle out
    then smaller ones

21
Cross-Bedding
  • Cross-bedding forms when layers come to rest at
    an angle to the surface upon which they
    accumulate as on the downwind side of a sand dune
  • Cross-beds result from transport by either water
    or wind
  • The beds are inclined or dip downward in the
    direction of the prevailing current
  • They indicate ancient current directions, or
    paleocurrents
  • useful for relative dating of deformed
    sedimentary rocks

22
Ripple Marks
  • Small-scale alternating ridges and troughs known
    as ripple marks are common on bedding planes,
    especially in sandstone
  • Current ripple marks form in response to water or
    wind currents flowing in one direction
  • have asymmetric profiles allowing geologists to
    determine paleocurrent directions
  • Wave-formed ripple marks result from the
    to-and-fro motion of waves
  • tend to be symmetrical
  • Useful for relative dating of deformed
    sedimentary rocks

23
Current Ripple Marks
  • Ripples with an asymmetrical shape
  • In the close-up of one ripple, the internal
    structure shows small-scale cross-bedding
  • The photo shows current ripples that formed in a
    small stream channel with flow from right to left

24
Wave-Formed Ripples
  • As the waves wash back and forth, symmetrical
    ripples form
  • The photo shows wave-formed ripple marks in
    shallow seawater

25
Cross-Bedding
  • Tabular cross-bedding forms by deposition on sand
    waves
  • Typically produce where streams enter large
    bodies of water (AKA Deltas)
  • Tabular cross-bedding in the Upper Cretaceous

26
  • Animation of crossbedding

27
Cross-Bedding
  • Trough cross-bedding formed by migrating dunes
  • Trough cross-beds in the Pliocene Six Mile Creek
    Formation, Montana

28
Mud Cracks
  • When clay-rich sediments dry, they shrink and
    crack into polygonal patterns bounded by
    fractures called mud cracks
  • Mud cracks require wetting and drying to form,
  • lakeshore
  • river flood plain
  • or where mud is exposed at low tide along a
    seashore

29
Ancient Mud Cracks
  • Mud cracks in ancient rocks in Glacier National
    Park, Montana
  • Mud cracks typically fill in with sediment when
    they are preserved as seen here

30
Biogenic Sedimentary Structures
  • Biogenic sedimentary structures include
  • tracks
  • burrows
  • trails
  • Also called trace fossils
  • Extensive burrowing by organisms is called
    bioturbation
  • may alter sediments so thoroughly that other
    structures are disrupted or destroyed

31
Sedimentary Structures
  • Sedimentary rocks form as layer upon layer of
  • sediment accumulates in various environments.
  • These layers are known as Strata or Beds.
  • Each Stratum or bed of a sedimentary rock is
    unique
  • Texture and composition of the bed reflects the
    different conditions under which each layer was
    deposited.

32
Between the Lines
  • Separating each strata are bedding planes.
  • Bedding Planes are flat surfaces along which the
    rock tends to break.
  • Caused by changes in grain size.
  • May also occur after pauses in deposition.
  • In general most deposition occurs due to
    sediments settling out of water therefore most
    bedding is horizontal.
  • In wind driven deposition, layers are not always
    horizontal. Sand dunes are a prime example. In
    these cases the bedding is described as Cross
    Bedding

33
Bedding Planes
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