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Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

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Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks. Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks. And. Pressure. Cementation. Erosion. Sedimentary Rocks. Sediment. Erosion. Heat. Erosion. Pressure. Heat and Pressure. Igneous Rocks. Metamorphic Rocks. Cooling. Heat. Magma. Sediments ( soft ) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Sedimentsand

Sedimentary Rocks

Page 2: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

SedimentaryRocks

IgneousRocks

MetamorphicRocks

Magma

Sediment

Pressure And Cementation

Weathering/Erosion

Weathering/Erosion

Heat and Pressure

CoolingHeat

Heat

Pressure W

eath

erin

g E

rosi

on

Page 3: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Sediments (soft)Material (such as gravel, sand, mud, and lime) that is transported by wind, water, ice, or gravity;Material that is precipitated from solution; Deposits of organic origin (such as coal and coral reefs).

Sedimentary Rock (hard)Rock formed by the accumulation and consolidation of sediment.

Page 4: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Sediments - unconsolidated particles created by

1. The weathering of rock

2. The secretions of organisms or decomposition of organic matter

3. Chemical precipitation

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Sedimentary Rocks

Composed of lithified sediments- by compaction- by cementation

Two (Textures) clastic (detrital) non-clastic

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Types of Sediments

Clastic

Non-clastic

1. Biochemical

2. Chemical

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1. Clastic

2. Non-clastic

* Biochemical

* Chemical

1. Phaneritic

2 .Aphanitic

* Glassy

* Vesicular

Igneous Rocks Sedimentary Rocks

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1. Clastic – broken fragments of rock produced by weathering.

Range in size from largest boulder to smallest clay particle.

Classified according to size.

Found everywhere on the Earth.

Types of Sediments

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Clastic TextureTexture - Size, shape, and distribution of particles that collectively make up a rock

•Size

•Rounding

•Sorting

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Clastic Sediment Size

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Clastic Texture

Roundness – the shape of sediment grains.

Related to the distance a sediment has been transported.

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Roundness / Sphericity of Sediments

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Size

Rounding

Sphericity

Sorting

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Clastic Sediments Sorting

Sorting – separation of sediments by grain size and density.

Poorly sorted – sediment with a wide range of grain sizes.

Well sorted – sediment with a small range of grain sizes.

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Sorting of Sediments

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Sorting - a function of transported

1. Water

2. Wind

3. Glaciers

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Texture and Transport Distance

In general, as transport distance increases, rounding and sorting increase.

Examples: Breccia – cemented close to sourceConglomerate – transported thencemented

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Source Downstream Beach OffshoreBasinBr

eccia

Cong

lom

erat

eAr

kose

Sand

ston

e

Swamp

Lithi

c San

dsto

ne

Quartz

Sand

ston

e

Reef

Silts

tone

Shal

e

Halite, Gypsum, Chert(Evaporites)

(Playa Lake)

Coal

Limestone

Clastic Sedimentary RocksSmaller….Rounder…..Better Sorted

Nonclastic Sedimentary Rocks

Coquina

Depositional Environments of Sedimentary Rocks

Page 19: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Transport by WaterSaltation – particles move downstream in

short jumps.

Bed load – material transported by saltation

Suspended load – material carried in water for long distances

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Transport by Water

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Sorting by Water

Graded Beds

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Fining up

Graded Beds

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Sorting by Wind

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Cross Bedding – water or wind

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Sorting by Glaciers

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Clast Size / Rock Name Relationship

Large Clasts Small Clasts

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Breccia - Formed at the source

Page 34: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Conglomerate – Formed near the source

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Sandstone – Down stream to just off shore

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Stream Deposit

Tidal Flat Deposit

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Off-Shore Environments

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StrataStratumStratigraphyStratigraphic

- relating to layered sedimentary rocks

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Bedding – Layering or stratification in sedimentary rock

Page 40: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

2. Biochemical (non-clastic)

– composed of remains of plants or animals.

Types of Sediments

Page 41: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Biochemical Sediments (non-clastic)

Corals - Large components of reefs.

Bivalves, Gastropods, Foraminifers - Whole or partial skeletons form sand and gravels.

Aglae, Crinoids, Echinoderms, Bryozoans - disintergrate to form some sand particles and lime mud.

Diatoms, Radiolaria – Bedded chert SiO2

Terestrial Sediments - mainly plant matter

Marine Sediments - mainly carbonates

Page 42: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Coral (carbonate)

Page 43: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Foramanifera

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Diatoms

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3. Chemical (non-clastic)

– formed by minerals precipitating from solution.

- Inorganic process, no biological activity involved.

Types of Sediments

Page 46: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Bonneville Salt Flats

Page 47: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Chemical Sediments (non-clastic)

1. Terestrial - Evaporites: Gypsum - CaSO4 . H2O Anhydrite - CaSO4 Halite - NaCl

2. Marine - Carbonates - CaCO3 (Whitings)

Page 48: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Clastic Rock – composed of fragments of preexisting rocks.

Non-clastic Rock – composed of chemical precipitates or biogenic matter.

Sedimentary Rocks

Page 49: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Ripple Marks

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Mud Cracks

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Burrows

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Depositional Environments

Where sedimentary rock live!

Page 53: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks
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Delta building into lake.  SE Alaska.

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small fan emerging from a wineglass canyon.  Death Valley, CA.

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Ripples on tidal flat, SE Alaska

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Son-Kul River, Tien Shan Mtns., Kyrgyzstan

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Peanut Brittle Conglomerate in Southern Illinois