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Prepared by Mark R' Noll

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Clastic Sedimentary Rocks. Made of rock & mineral fragments or clasts ... Subsiding basins associated with folded mountains accumulate clastic sediments ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prepared by Mark R' Noll


1
Prepared by Mark R. Noll SUNY College at Brockport
2
The Nature of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Sedimentary rocks are composed of
  • Fragments of other rocks
  • Chemical precipitates
  • Organic matter or biochemically produced materials

3
The Nature of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Sedimentary rocks are common at the Earths
    surface
  • Cover 75 of the continents
  • Cover nearly all of the ocean floor
  • Easily eroded
  • Occur in distinct layers (strata)

4
The Nature of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Layers are easily identified
  • Majors layers (formations) easily recognized over
    large distances
  • Smaller layers within a formation are separated
    by bedding planes
  • Gradation in grain size, composition or physical
    features may vary

5
Fig. 5.1. Layered sedimentary rocks exposed
in the Grand Canyon, AZ
6
The Nature of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Sedimentary rocks contain evidence of their
    environment of formation
  • Animal and plant fossils
  • Bedding planes indicate environment and mode of
    transport of sediment
  • Texture consists of particle aggregates or
    crystalline precipitate minerals

7
Classification of Sedimentary Rocks
  • Sedimentary rocks are classified by texture and
    composition
  • Texture defines 2 major categories
  • Clastic
  • Chemical and Biochemical

8
Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
  • Made of rock mineral fragments or clasts
  • Clasts are broken and worn particles transported
    by water, wind or ice
  • Clastic rocks are subdivided by grain size

9
Fig. 5.4. Grain size ranges for classification
of common clastic sedimentary rocks
10
Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
  • Grain size is controlled by
  • Size of grains in source rock
  • Carrying capacity of transport process
  • Weathering and erosion that occurs during
    transportation

11
Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
  • Common clastic sedimentary rocks
  • Conglomerate
  • Sandstone
  • Mudrock or Shale
  • Siltstone
  • Claystone

12
Chemical/Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks
  • Formed by a process that takes ions from solution
    to form a solid
  • Chemical Sediments
  • Precipitates from water by an inorganic process
  • Biochemical Sediments
  • Formed during the growth of some organism

13
Chemical/Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks
  • Subdivided by composition and mode of formation
  • e.g., Limestone
  • Biochemical formation by algae, coral, etc.
  • Direct chemical precipitate from warm sea water -
    oolites
  • Chemical precipitate from springs and in caves

14
Chemical/Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks
  • Common Chemical/Biochemical rocks
  • Dolostone - composed of dolomite
  • Chert - microcrystalline quartz
  • Various modes of formation
  • Evaporites
  • Rock salt - halite
  • Gypsum

15
Sedimentary Structures
  • Strata or beds
  • Distinct layers having variations in texture,
    color or physical properties
  • Formations
  • Large scale stratification
  • Contain numerous individual strata

16
Sedimentary Structures
  • Cross-bedding
  • Individual layers are inclined in reference to
    the top or bottom of the larger bed
  • Formed by movement of sand waves or dunes
  • Inclination shows flow direction and right-side-up

17
TOP
BOTTOM
Fig. 5.9. Cross-bedding formed by dune
migration. Flow direction and top of bed
indicated.
18
Sedimentary Structures
  • Graded bedding
  • Progressive change in grain size upward through a
    bed
  • Fining upward
  • Commonly formed by turbidites
  • Subaqueous flows of muddy water
  • Coarsest particles settle first

19
Sedimentary Structures
  • Surface impressions
  • Indicate the top of a sedimentary bed
  • Preserve features indicating past environment
  • Ripple marks
  • Mud cracks

20
Sedimentary Structures
  • Fossils
  • Fossil remains or trace fossils
  • Indicate paleo-environment
  • Detailed study may provide
  • Depth of water
  • Temperature and salinity
  • Relative age of rock

21
Sedimentary Systems
  • Systems work on the Earths crust
  • Energy drives the system to change
  • Solar
  • Chemical Potential
  • Gravity

22
Sedimentary Systems
  • Systems include
  • Weathering
  • Transportation
  • Deposition
  • Lithification
  • Final sedimentary rock records the processes that
    produced it

23
Fig. 5.13. Idealized diagram of
major sedimentary systems.
24
Stratigraphic Sequences
  • Sequences - Groups of formations bounded by
    erosional surfaces
  • 17,000 formations within the U.S.
  • Each formation is distinct in time, place and
    rock type
  • Sequences of formations relate changes in
    depositional environments

25
Stratigraphic Sequences
  • Advance and retreat of shallow seas
  • Common example of a stratigraphic sequence
  • One cycle consists of
  • Sandstone-shale-limestone-shale-sandstone
  • Sequence base is an unconformity

26
Fig 5.26. Sequence of sediments deposited
by transgression and regression of shallow sea
27
Sequence Stratigraphy
  • Sedimentary rock formations classified by rock
    type
  • Sequences of formations may be grouped together
  • Sequences separated by unconformity
  • Relate global scale events
  • e.g., Change in sea level

28
Fig. 5.27. Changes in sea level throughout
geologic history
29
Sedimentary Systems
  • Plate tectonics plays a major role
  • Sediment deposition geographic distribution
  • Sediment source areas
  • Formation of sequences

30
Continental Environments
  • Sediment produced by weathering erosion
  • Transported by streams, wind or glaciers
  • Thin deposits formed
  • Most sediment carried to the sea

31
Continental Rift Valleys
  • Sequences of conglomerates sandstones
  • Proximity to source area
  • Wedge shaped deposits
  • Lake or evaporite deposits may form
  • Dependent on climate

32
Convergent Plate Boundaries
  • Subsiding basins associated with folded mountains
    accumulate clastic sediments
  • Shallow seas may form in basins
  • Marine limestones, shales or evaporites
  • Turbidites associated with trenches
  • Sediment from ocean floor is scraped off to form
    a melange

33
Tectonic settings and their associated
sedimentary sequences
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