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ESC102 Sedimentary Rocks Our keys to the past Sedimentary Rocks Sedimentary rocks are rocks that form through the accumulation of sediment. Divided into two major categories: •Detrital or Clastic sedimentary rocks are rocks that are made of the weathered remains of other rocks. •Chemical sedimentary rocks are produced either through life processes (biochemical/bioclastic) or through precipitation of minerals in water environments Why is the study of sedimentary rocks important to understanding Earth history? Investigating Sedimentary rocks In order to decode past environment using sedimentary rock we need to pay particular attention to: textures composition fossils (if present) thickness relationships to other rocks Preliminary interpretations in the field - redish rocks may have been deposited on land - whereas greenish rocks are more typical of marine - deposits (caution: exceptions are numerous) Detrital Sedimentary Rocks Detrital sedimentary rocks are identified based on mineral composition and texture. Mineral Composition: • Common minerals include quartzes, feldspars, and clay minerals Mineral composition is only used to determine source rocks it does not indicate the manner of transport or deposition For example: • Quartz sand may have been deposited • in a river system • on a beach or • in sand dunes Detrital Sedimentary Rocks Texture refers to the grain size of the clasts that form the sedimentary rock Sediment Type Sediment Description blocks Angular particles greater than 256 mm in size. boulders Rounded particles greater than 256 mm in size. cobbles Rounded particles between 64 and 256 mm in size. pebbles Rounded particles between 2 and 64 mm in size. sand Particles between .0625 and 2 mm in size. silt Particles between 2µm and .0625 mm in size. clay Particles less than 2µm in size. Texture as an environmental indicator Grain size gives some indication of the energy conditions during transport and deposition • The larger the clast the greater the energy needed to transport that clast. • Sand and larger clasts require vigorous currents (fast water= high energy) • Silt and clay are transported by very weak currents and and therefore only accumulate under low-energy conditions such as in lakes and lagoons Textural characteristics 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 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 Other textural characteristics 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 Chemical Sedimentary Rocks Divided into two categories: Chemical sedimentary rocks are produced through precipitation of chemicals in water environments as a result of changing environmental conditions ie. temperature, pH, oxidizing conditions Biochemical sedimentary rocks are produced as a direct result of life processes Chemical Sedimentary Rocks Composition of chemical sedimentary rocks is more useful in revealing environmental information Limestone is deposited in warm, shallow seas although a small amount also originates in lakes Evaporites such as rock salt and rock gypsum indicate arid environments where evaporation rates were high Coal originates in swamps and bogs on land 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 Sedimentary Structures Sedimentary rocks generally have bedding or stratification (they are deposited in layers) Beds are layers that are thicker than 1 cm common in rocks with coarser grains laminations are layers less than 1 cm thick are common in mudrocks Sedimentary Structures Graded bedding occurs when sediment loaded currents (turbidity currents) experience a relatively quick drop in velocity. what will happen to the sediment as the current slows? Will all sediment sizes behave the same way? Sedimentary Structures 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 These herringbone Tabular crossbeds: crossbeds have foresetis Trough cross bedding shallow dips as in this beds that dip in both produced by such the image are migration indicative of directions. downflow of currents enter still bodies of What may have caused lunate dunes in both water (Gilbertand Delta). Steep this? subaqueous foreset beds are indicative subaerial environments of eolian (wind) deposition Sedimentary Structures Small-scale cross bedding creates ripple marks. These structures 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 • symmetrical profile Sedimentary Structures 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 so in what environments would you expect to find them? Sedimentary Structures Biogenic sedimentary structures include • tracks • burrows • trails These structures are also called trace fossils Extensive burrowing by organisms is called bioturbation may alter sediments so thoroughly that other structures are disrupted or destroyed Depositional Environments A depositional environment is anywhere sediment accumulates Three broad areas of deposition include •continental •transitional •marine each of these areas has several specific environments with their own physical, chemical, and biological processes