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Chapter 5: Sandstone and Conglomerates

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Chapter 5: Sandstone and Conglomerates Terrigenous From the Earth Terrigenous clastic sedimentary rocks are composed of clasts of pre-existing rocks and minerals. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 5: Sandstone and Conglomerates


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Chapter 5Sandstone and Conglomerates
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Terrigenous
  • From the Earth
  • Terrigenous clastic sedimentary rocks are
    composed of clasts of pre-existing rocks and
    minerals.
  • Also referred as
  • detrital (detached from pre-existing rocks by
    erosion or weathering), or
  • Epiclastic (derived from the surface).

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Silisiclastic
  • Because most terrigenous clastics are especially
    rich in quartz and other silicates minerals, the
    term silisiclastic is also used.
  • Clast formed by physical weathering are eroded
    and transported by mass wasting, wind, water, and
    ice and are deposited as discrete, unconsolidated
    fragments that are eventually lithified.

4
  • Terrigeneous sediments and sedimentary rocks are
    defined on the basis of clast diameter.
  • Three distinct groups are recognized
  • Conglomerates and breccias
  • Sandstones
  • mudrocks

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Conglomerates and Breccias
  • Conglomerates is lithified gravel made up of
    rounded to subrounded clasts whose diameters
    exceed 2 mm.
  • They are also called roundstone or puddingstone.
  • Breccias is lithified rubble made up of angular
    clasts coarser than 2 mm.
  • They are also called sharpstone.

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Conglomerates and Breccias
  • The roundness (angularity) of the grains is
    measured using standard grain silhouettes.
  • Very coarse clastic rocks are collectively
    referred to as rudites or rudaceous sedimentary
    rocks.

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Composition
  • Most clasts on conglomerates and breccias are
    fragments of rocks and minerals produced by the
    disintegration of bedrock.
  • These occur both as coarser-grained fragments and
    finer-grained matrix filling the space between
    fragments.
  • Clasts are typically glued together by a small
    amount of siliceous, calcareous, or ferruginous
    cement.

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Conglomerates and Breccias
  • Three principal categories of clasts are
    distinguished
  • Mineral fragments that occur as major components,
  • Mineral fragments that occur as accessory
    constituents, and
  • Fragments of rock.

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Mineral fragments occurring as major constituents
(5 or more)
  • Clasts of a single mineral such as quartz or
    feldspar tend to be less abundant in
    conglomerates and breccias than in sandstone
    because few igneous, metamorphic, or sedimentary
    rocks have original grains coarse enough to
    disintegrate into pebbles and coarser detritus.
  • Source rocks with mineral grain diameters coarser
    than 8 mm (fine pebble) include quartz veins,
    pegmatites, deep-seated plutons, high-grade
    metamorphic rocks, breccias and conglomerates.

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  • Quartz is the most abundant major mineral in
    conglomerates and breccias.
  • It is harder than other rock-forming mineral
  • Has no cleavage
  • Practically insoluble
  • Large clasts of K-feldspar, plagioclase feldspar,
    and mica can also be abundant but seldom last as
    long as quartz because they corrode,
    disaggregate, and abrade with transport.
  • The sand matrix is similar in composition to
    sandstone interbedded with the conglomerate or
    breccia.

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Mineral class occurring as accessory constituents
(less than 5)
  • Other fragments occur as accessory, their
    presence is incidental.
  • They occur as accessory minerals either because
    their original abundance in source rocks is low
    or because they are easily destroyed by
    weathering.
  • Micas and heavy minerals such as olivine,
    pyroxene, amphibole, zircon, magnetite and
    hematite.

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Rock fragments
  • Rock fragments are typically the most abundant
    component in very coarse-grained terrigenous
    rocks and are invariably the most interesting.
  • Careful analysis of their composition provides us
    with direct information on provenance.

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Texture
  • Conglomerate and breccia textures are studied at
    the outcrop using methods of quantitative grain
    size analysis that differ from those used for
    sandstone.
  • Grain diameters of particles coarser than sand
    (gt2mm).
  • The interstitial space between framework grains
    can be empty filled with finer-grained detrital
    matrix or occupied by cement, fluid (oil, water)
    or natural gas.

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Two distinctive varieties of conglomerates (and
breccias) are defined on the basis of texture
  • Orthoconglomerates (literally, true
    conglomerates) consist mainly of gravel-sized
    framework grains. Matrix (sand or finer) is less
    than 15. So, grain-supported framework.
  • Paraconglomerate have a matrix of sand and finer
    clasts. Matrix is at least 15 most have 50
    matrix and are actually sandstone and mudrocks in
    which pebbles, cobbles and boulders are scattered.

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Extraformational or intraformational
  • They are separated by comparing the composition
    of framework and matrix grains.
  • Intraformational- conglomerates and breccias have
    an interior (intrabasinal) source that is they
    are eroded from the same sedimentary rock unit
    they are a part, rather than being derived from
    rocks located outside the depositional basin.
    Consequently intraformational conglomerates and
    breccias have framework grains identical in
    composition to those in the matrix.

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Extraformational or intraformational
  • Extraformational- conglomerates and breccias are
    derived from sources areas outside the
    depositional basin. Detritus weathered from
    external sources is carried away and deposited
    elsewhere. As a result framework clasts differ
    markedly in composition from matrix.Framework
    matrix is exotic that is, not derived by the
    erosion and redeposition of matrix material.

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Orthoconglomerate and Paraconglomerates
  • (Orthobreccias and Parabreccias)
  • They are separated by examining the proportion of
    matrix. Orthoconglomerate are matrix poor,
    Paraconglomerates are matrix rich.

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Orthoconglomerates
  • They are matrix-poor (80 or more framework
    grains) and have an intact, stable,
    grain-supported fabric. They are transported and
    deposited on a grain-by grain basis by fluids,
    specifically water or air.
  • Oligomict or petromict-cngl are further divided
    into these on the basis of framework grain
    composition.

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Oligomict or petromict
  • In oligomict (orthoquartzose) conglomerates (or
    breccias), more than 90 of the framework clasts
    consist of fragments of only a few varieties of
    resistant rocks and minerals as metaquartzite,
    vein quartz, and cherts.
  • In petromict (polymict) clasts of many different
    composition of metastable and unstable rocks are
    abundant for example, basalt, slate, and
    limestone.

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  • A more precise classification can be given by
    specifying predominant clast size and lithology
  • quartz pebble oiligomictic orthoconglomerate
  • slate coble petromictic parabreccia

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  • Oligomict orthoconglomerates imply wholesale
    decomposition and disintegration of immense
    volumes of rocks, reflecting climate and
    topography that promote chemical decomposition
    and physical disintegration of all but the most
    resistant components.
  • Typically stream channels deposits and bars
    deposits, or near shore marine settings.

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  • Petromic are much more abundant than oligomict
    orthoconglomerates and are mainly alluvium eroded
    from high-relief areas.

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Paraconglomerates
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Paraconglomerates
  • Paraconglomerates and parabreccias are further
    divided on the basis of their inferred origin as
    well as the size and internal organization of
    their matrix.
  • Is the matrix sand or mud?
  • Is the matrix internally laminated or chaotic?
  • Is the framework imbricated, sorted, and
    vertically graded?
  • Is the deposit sheetlike or lenticular?
  • With what other types of sediment is the deposit
    associated?

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Paraconglomerates
  • Paraconglomerates containing a matrix of
    delicately laminated mudrocks in which coarser
    framework grains float are called laminated
    pebbly (or cobbly, or bouldery) mudrock.
  • Dropstone- ice rafting

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Paraconglomerates
  • Paraconglomerates in which the matric is
    disorganized and non-laminated are either tillite
    (only if glacial origin can be inferred) or
    tilloid (deposited by mass movement).

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