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Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains or boulders or they may be dissolved particles which will later precipitate from the water and form solid rock. What is a Sedimentary Rock? Sediments after they are deposited may be buried and undergo physical and chemical change resulting in a solid rock
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Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

What are sediments?Sediments are loose particles of former

rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains or boulders or they may be dissolved particles which will later precipitate from the water and form solid rock.What is a Sedimentary Rock? Sediments after they are deposited may be buried and undergo physical and chemical change resulting in a solid rock (Sedimentary Rock)

Page 2: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Types of Sedimentary Rocks• Three main types of Sedimentary rocks:

– Clastic-is formed from solid particles which are eroded from previous rocks.

– Chemical/Biochemical—these sediments which are precipitate from water either through chemical or biochemical processes (biological)

Page 3: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Sedimentary Cycle (part of the Rock Cycle)

Sedimentary rocks all go through the following cycle:1. weathering from previous rocks.2. erosion of weathering products.3. transportation from site of origin to another site.4. deposition of the sediments.5. burial of the sediments6. diagenesis

Page 4: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Sedimentary Rock Cyclehttp://www.mtsu.edu/~cdharris/GEOL100/erosion/sed-rk-cycle.gif

Page 5: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Transportation of Clastic Rock • In general most sediments travel downhill or

downstream. • Mode of transportation include:

– Streams, rivers– Glaciers– Wind– Ocean waves/tides/currents

• The size of particle depends on the available force applied. Example: at flood level a river will be able to transport larger particles than it would during a normal river levels. This results in particles being sorted by size which is called sorting.

Page 6: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

http://earth.geol.ksu.edu/liu/g100/figures/20_transportation.jpg

Page 7: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

http://www.rjmaxwell.com/education/basic_geological_classification/

Page 8: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Transportation of Clastic Rock

• If the particles are being transported they bang into each other repeatedly resulting in the grains wearing down and becoming rounded. This is called Rounding (Dah).

• In general the farther a particle travels from it source the more rounded it becomes. A jagged particle is near the source rock, where the rounded, smooth particle is farther from the source rock.

Page 9: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Sorting and Rounding

pasadena.wr.usgs.gov/office/given/geo1/lecturenotes/SedRx_files/image010.gif

Page 10: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Clastic Rock Deposition

• Sediments will be dropped by it mode of transportation when the energy is not sufficient to carry the particle farther. This is called deposition. A particle may be deposited numerous times before final deposition occurs.

Page 11: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Clastic Rock: Burial/Diagenesis• As the particles are deposited and sorted

they build up layers and become buried by later sediments. Layer after layer pile up on top of each other. Those sediments on the bottom are buried under increasing pressure, which compact the sediments and force out the water. The sediments are undergoing diagenesis (physical and chemical changes that turn sediments into sedimentary rocks.

Page 12: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Diagenesis

• In addition to squeezing the water out, new minerals form in the space between the sediment grains which cements the grains together.

• Also some sedimentary grain may dissolve and be replaced by other minerals.

Page 13: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

http://www.rjmaxwell.com/education/basic_geological_classification/

Page 14: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Classification of Clastic Rocks

• There are two types of Clastic rocks: – 1.Sandstones and fine grained– 2.Chemical/Biochemical

Page 15: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Sandstones and fine grainedClastic Rocks

• Sands when buried lithifies to form Sandstone. Depending on the grain size, shape, and mineralogy they can be placed in three additional major categories.– Siltstones- composed of silt size grains which become

lithified.– Shale- composed of silt and clay size grains which

lithified. These tend to break on bedding planes. Some may contain oil but is difficult to separate from the rock itself.

– Mudstone- composed of lithified mud. Generally blocky in appearance and when freshly broken have a musty smell.

Page 16: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Chemical/Biochemical Rocks

• Ions which were dissolved from pre-existing rocks go into solution and travel down stream to lakes and oceans. In the lakes and oceans the ion precipitate out either by biochemical or inorganic chemical processes.

• The precipitates form a solid, and go through biogenesis just like clastic rocks. Examples of this is aragonite which forms fine grain calcium carbonate. Halite (NaCL) is another precipitate that occurs in this way.

Page 17: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Chemical/Biochemical Rocks

• Chemical/Biochemical Rocks can be broken down also into 3 major categories.– 1. Carbonates– 2. Evaporites– 3. Cherts

Page 18: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Carbonates

• Carbonates are formed from lithifed carbonate material in ocean waters through biochemical processes. Marine organisms extract the carbonate from the ocean waters and form shell material. Organism such as foraminifera, gastropods, corals, etc. make up the bulk of the material forming limestones, and dolomites.

Page 19: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Some typical environments that carbonates can form.

http://www.geologyrocks.co.uk/tut.php?id=14

Page 20: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Evaporates

• Evaporates generally form in shallow brackish lagoons in arid regions where the water is evaporated away leaving the precipitates such as Aragonite (carbonates), rock salt, and gypsum.

• Some large salt deposits also occur, such as the M zone in the Mediterranean Sea.

Page 21: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

http://www.geo.msu.edu/geo333/images/salt-cycle.jpg

Page 22: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Chert

• Cherts form in the deep, deep ocean environments where organism which secret a siliceous shell have deposited after death. Diatoms will accumulate and form a siliceous ooze which will then go through diagenesis, becoming chert.

Page 23: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

Summary

• You should know the following:– What are sediments?– What are sedimentary rocks.– What are the major sedimentary rocks.– Able to label and draw the processes which

make up the sedimentary rock cycle.– How do sedimentary rocks (clastic and

chemical/biochemical) form and how are they classified.

Page 24: Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks What are sediments? Sediments are loose particles of former rocks. Sediments may be particles in the form of mineral grains.

SITES USED

• Thanks to Greg Anderson for use of lecture notes.

http://pasadena.wr.usgs.gov/office/ganderson/es10/lectures

ALSO: http://earth.geol.ksu.edu/liu/g100/figures/20_transportation.jpg

http://www.rjmaxwell.com/education/basic_geological_classification/pasadena.wr.usgs.gov/office/given/geo1/lecturenotes/SedRx_files/image010.gif

http://www.rjmaxwell.com/education/basic_geological_classification/

http://www.geologyrocks.co.uk/tut.php?id=14

http://www.geo.msu.edu/geo333/images/salt-cycle.jpg

http://www.mtsu.edu/~cdharris/GEOL100/erosion/sed-rk-cycle.gif