Sedimentary Rocks Lab

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Last Modified: 08/20/09
Lecture Notes

Overheads shown in Lab

SEDIMENTARY ROCK: Made from sediments consolidated at the earth's surface. The sediments are deposited at the earth's surface by water, wind, glacial ice, or bio-chemical processes. Typically the sediments are deposited in layers under COOL conditions [thereby distinguishing it from a layered volcanic rock (TUFF)].


Topics of Discussion for Sedimentary rocks: (click on the topic to jump to that section)


Types of Sedimentary Rocks

Clastic - made up of CLASTS (also termed grains or detritus) & CEMENT (calcite, quartz, or hematite)

  • Cementation is due to DIAGENESIS (p. 44)

Chemical - made of chemical or evaporite sediments (see below); rock usually made up of 1 mineral

  • Examples: Limestone, Dolomite, Evaporites (p. 50).

Weathering & Erosion

WEATHERING: Changes that take place in a rock exposed at the Earth's surface.

  • Mechanical - Big to little particles - NO CHEMICAL CHANGE!
  • Chemical - refers to 1) dissolution of minerals or 2) formation of new minerals that are more stable at the lower temperature, lower pressure, and higher moisture at the Earth's surface (Example: feldspar --> clay).

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Transportation & Deposition

For Clastic rocks: Clasts (sediments) are physically transported by wind, water, glaciers, and/or gravity.

  • Clasts are deposited when the transportation energy is insufficient to move the particle. As transportation energy decreases, the larger (heavier) particles are deposited first.
  • HIGH ENERGY environments can transport large and small particles
  • LOW ENERGY environments can transport only small particles

Examples of high and low energy environments? See p. 46, Fig. 3-1

Low Energy Environment High Energy Environment

Lagoon

Storm-Dominated Beach

Deep Lake

Steep Mountainside (Landslide)

Deep Ocean

Tornado

 

Tsunami

NOTE: The longer the transportation distance, the more exposure the sediment has to chemical and physical weathering!

For Chemical rocks: Chemical sediments are generated by the precipitation of minerals out of solution by biological activity, chemical change, or evaporation.  These minerals (chemical sediments) are precipitated when the dissolved ion concentration becomes too large to remain in solution.

Where do these dissolved ions come from?

This is an important question since the dissolved ions are the "building blocks" for the chemical sediments. It is the chemical weathering of sediments (dissolution of minerals) that releases these ions into solution. Once in solution, the ions can travel in groundwater, rivers, etc. to their final destination (such as an ocean, lake, cave, etc.) where they are precipitated as minerals.

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Texture: (For Clastic Rocks Only)

1) Particle Size:

  • Clay (Very Fine Grained): < 1/256 mm
  • Silt (Fine Grained) : 1/256 to 1/16 mm
  • Sand (Medium Grained) : 1/16 to 2 mm
  • Pebbles (Coarse Grained) : > 2 mm

Particle size indicates the energy of the transporting medium. The larger the size of grains in a clastic rock, the more energy it took to move that particle to the place of deposition!

2) Angularity: Degree to which the individual sedimentary particles are rounded.

  • WELL ROUNDED - all corners of a grain are rounded off
  • ANGULAR - all corners of a grain are still sharp (pointed)

The more the corners of an individual grain in a clastic rock are rounded, the longer the distance the grain has been transported.

3) Sorting: Degree to which the sedimentary particles are the same size.

  • POORLY SORTED - large and small grains jumbled together
  • WELL SORTED - all grains are the same size!

Poor sorting suggests that the particles have not been transported very far.


Clastic Rocks:  Let's pull all of this together!

What would be some general trends seen if you were to look at the sediments being weathered, eroded, and transported from a granite mountain to the plains to a  deep lake or ocean?

General trends:  Distance from sediment source vs. texture and mineralogy
 

At source

Near source

Intermediate from source

Far from source

Farthest from source

Largest grain size seen boulder-sized pebble to sand sand silt clay-sized
Angularity angular sub-rounded rounded well rounded  
Sorting poor poor to moderate moderate to well well well
           
Mineralogy Q,F,M Q,F,(M) Q,(F) Q clay
           
Typical clastic rock breccia conglomerate, arkose quartz sandstone siltstone shale

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Sedimentary Structures and Fossils--things found in sedimentary rocks

  1. Stratification - horizontal layering at time of deposition
  2. Ripple Marks - undulatory structures due to wind/water current
  3. Cross Bedding - internal angular layering within a horizontal bed (due to ripple mark remnants)
  4. Mud Cracks (Desiccation Cracks) - when mud (basically clay) dries, it shrinks and pulls apart from itself--forming polygonal columns.

Fossils - evidence of past life (either a remnant of the organism itself or its activity); can indicate where the sediments were deposited!

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Names of Rocks in Trays (Underline the rocks on p.42-43)

Sedimentary rocks listed in black are clastic sedimentary rocks.  Those listed in blue are chemical sedimentary rocks.

  • Breccia (consists of coarse, angular grains w/poor sorting)
  • Conglomerate (coarse, rounded grains w/poor sorting)
  • Sandstone (rock consisting of sand sized particles of any composition (quartz is most common)
  • Arkose (sandstone rich in orthoclase feldspar)
  • Siltstone (Grain size in between sandstone and shale)
  • Shale, mudstone (Very fine grained clastic rock made of clay minerals derived by chemical weathering of feldspar)
  • Coquina - Limestone made of cemented shell fragments
  • Limestone - made mostly of calcite precipitated chiefly through the agency of living organisms -- "fizzes" vigorously
  • Dolomite - an altered limestone that "fizzes" sluggishly
  • Rock salt - NaCl (halite); an evaporite mineral
  • Rock gypsum - CaSO4 * 2 H2O (gypsum); an evaporite mineral
  • Chert - dense, hard sediment consisting of micro-crystals of quartz (looks like unglazed porcelain)
  • Coal - carbon rich rock consisting of altered plant material

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