Title: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks
1Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks
L - 6 cd/EM - E
Tom Bean/DRK
2Sedimentary rocks
- 5 by volume of the upper crust
- 75 by area of continental areas
- Often the only record of geologic events
- e.g. The Himalayas will someday be sandstone
3Sedimentary Stages in the Rock Cycle
42 KINDS OF SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
- DETRITAL CLASTIC - Rock resulting from the
consolidation of loose sediment that has been
derived from previously existing rocks and
accumulated in layers - CHEMICAL - Rock formed by the precipitation of
minerals from solution by either organic or
inorganic processes
5Transport and deposition of clastic sediments
- Movement of sediment by wind, ice or water
(GEOLOGIC AGENTS). - Mode of transport produces distinctive deposits.
- Deposit as layers - beds/strata
6Transport affects the sediment in several ways -
- Sorting measure of the variation in the
- range of grain sizes in a clastic rock or
- sediment
- Well-sorted sediments indicate that they have
been subjected to prolonged water or wind action. - Poorly-sorted sediments are either not
far-removed from their source or deposited by
glaciers.
7Sorting
Well-sorted
Poorly-sorted
8Well-sorted Sand
Rex Elliott
9Poorly-sorted Sand
Rex Elliott
10Transport affects the sediment in several ways -
SHAPE
- Roundness measure of how rounded the corners
are - Sphericity measure of how much it is like a
sphere - Sorting, roundness, and sphericity all
increase with LENGTH of transport.
11Sorting
Roundness
12(No Transcript)
13Types of detrital rocks
- Largely based on the size of the particles, which
may be anything. - Conglomerate (poorly sorted/round)
- Breccia (poorly sort/angular)
- Sandstone (quartzite, arkose, greywacke)
- Mudstone
- Siltstone
- Shale - most common rock on continents
14Conglomerate
Breck Kent
15Sandstone
Breck Kent
16Shale
D. Cavagnaro/Visuals Unlimited
17SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
- CHEMICAL ROCK- Rock formed by the precipitation
of minerals from solution by either organic or
inorganic processes
18Types of chemical sedimentary rocks
- Limestone CaCO3
- Chert SiO2
- Salt NaCl, KCl
- Gypsum CaSO4 2H2O
- Coal altered organic debris
19Limestone
Breck Kent
20Halite
Breck Kent
21Chert
Breck Kent
22Fossiliferous Limestone
Peter Kresan
23Chemical environments Evaporites
- Restricted environments such as Mediterranean
Sea Texas coast - Minerals precipitate according to
solubility. - Gypsum Halite
- CaSO4 2H2O NaCl
24One Model for the Formation of Evaporites
25Chemical environments Carbonates
- Clear water away from big rivers (or volcanoes)
- Warm water subtropical to tropical
- Shallow water -- two reasons
- Organic sunlight only penetrates to
- about 100 m
- Inorganic CCD so carbonates dissolve
26Foraminifer in the Eye of a Needle
Chevron Corporation
27Coral Reef Surrounding Volcanic Island
Jean-Marc Truchet/Tony Stone Worldwide
28Common Sedimentary Environments
29Clues to interpreting sedimentary depositional
environments
- Sedimentary structures
- Sorting, roundness, sphericity
- Sequence kinds of beds
30Sedimentary structures
- Particular structural features can give
information about the environment of deposition. - Structures also help determine if a bed is
right-side-up important in deformed rocks
31Cross-bedded Sandstone
Peter Kresan
32Varves record annual cycles in glacial lakes
Turbidity currents
S. C. Porter
33Modern Rippled Sand
Raymond Seiver
34Ancient Ripple-marked Sandstone
Reg Morrison/Auscape
35Fig. 7.9
36Mudcracks
MODERN
ANCIENT
37Bioturbation Tracks and Tunnels
Chip Clark
38From Peat to Coal
39The end