Sediment and Sedimentary Rocks Chapter 6 Eroded sandstone formations from ancient sand dunes – Colorado Plateau Omo River basin – Ethiopia - hot, dry, inhospitable © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Sedimentary Rocks Chapter 6 • Produced from weathering products of pre-existing rocks or accumulated biological matter – Detrital rocks produced from rock fragments – Chemical rocks produced by precipitation of dissolved ions in water – Organic rocks produced by accumulation of biological debris, such as in swamps or bogs Relationship to Earth’s Systems • Atmosphere – Most sediments produced by weathering in air – Sand and dust transported by wind • Hydrosphere – Water is a primary agent in sediment production, transportation, deposition, cementation, and formation of sedimentary rocks • Biosphere – Biological activity key to formation of sedimentary rocks – Petroleum and coal resources have biological origin From Sediment to Sedimentary Rock Deposition – Environment of deposition is the location in which deposition, settling, accumulation occurs • • • • • Deep sea floor Beach Desert dunes River channel Lake bottom From Sediment to Sedimentary Rock • Preservation – Sediment must be preserved, as by burial with additional sediments, in order to become a sedimentary rock • Lithification – General term for processes converting loose sediment into sedimentary rock – Combination of compaction and cementation © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Lithification AND/OR 3. RECRYSTALLIZATION Shells made of aragonite © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Shells made of calcite From clasts to rocks SEDIMENT ROCK Figure 8.1 © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Conglomerate Sandstone From clasts to rocks SEDIMENT ROCK Figure 8.1 © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Siltstone Shale or Mudstone Types of Sedimentary Rocks • Detrital sedimentary rocks – Form from cemented sediment grains that come from pre-existing rocks • Chemical sedimentary rocks – Form by precipitation of minerals from solution – Have crystalline textures •Organic sedimentary rocks – Accumulate from remains of organisms Clues to a bed’s origin Sediment-laden flood water carries a wide range of clasts. As velocity of flow drops, the largest clasts settle first. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Clues to a bed’sClues originto a bed’s origin As velocity of flow drops, the largest clasts settle first. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Cross Bedding © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Cross-bedding SORTING Very poorly sorted © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Moderately sorted Very well sorted Sorting and Roundness ROUNDNESS High sphericity High sphericity High sphericity Low sphericity Low sphericity Low sphericity Angular Intermediate Rounded Grains which have traveled the farthest will be more rounded. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Examples of Sediment Sorting Glacial till is typically poorly sorted. sorted © 2008Glac, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Sand grains are well From Sediment to Sedimentary Rock • Transportation – Movement of sediment away from its source, typically by water, wind, or ice – Rounding of particles occurs due to abrasion during transport – Sorting occurs as sediment is separated according to grain size by transport agents, especially running water – Sediment size decreases with increased transport distance V = D/T D1 = 10 cm D2 = 5 cm D3 = 2 cm T1 = 2 sec T2 = 2 sec T3 = 2 sec V2 V3 Find: V1 Water velocity Chemical Biogenic Sediments Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Foraminifera One-celled plankton Banded Iron Formation - Australia Black layers are rich in reduced iron (Fe2+) Red layers are rich in oxidized iron (Fe3+) White layers are rich in silica. * Iron dissolved in seawater formed chemical sediments. * Today iron content in seawater is lower, because it reacts with oxygen in atmosphere * Algea bacteria, the early photosynthesizers, may have oxygenated our atmosphere. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Biogenic Sedimentary Rocks Limestone A sedimentary rock that consists primarily of the mineral calcite. Peat A biogenic sediment formed from the accumulation and compaction of plant material. Coal A combustible rock formed from the lithification of plant-rich sediment. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Two of these rocks are sedimentary, one is igneous. Can you identify them? Plate Tectonics and Sedimentary Rocks • Tectonic setting plays key role in the distribution of sedimentary rocks • Occurrence of specific sedimentary rock types can be used to reconstruct past platetectonic settings • Erosion rates and depositional characteristics give clues to each type of tectonic plate boundary Sites of sedimentation Figure 8.16 © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Divergent plate boundaries Sites Sitesof ofsedimentation sedimentation Figure 8.16 © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Convergent plate boundariesCollisional-type Sites Sitesof ofsedimentation sedimentation Figure 8.16 © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Convergent plate boundariesSubduction-type Amazing Places: The Navajo Sandstone © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Sedimentary Rocks (?) on Mars In all the craters, the walls expose subsurface sedimentary rock (fine-grained sandstones) up to ten meters thick. The deeper the crater, the more layers are visible; no underlying rock has yet been seen. The whole of Meridiani Planum, hundreds of kilometers wide, appears underlain by sedimentary rock to a depth that is still unknown. Pancam photo mosaic, approximately true color: NASA/JPL/Cornell Sedimentary Rocks (?) on Mars Fractured and apparently layered rock on Mars. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS Sedimentary Rocks (?) on Mars More than four years after Mars rover Spirit visited the Comanche outcrop in Gusev Crater's Columbia Hills, scientists armed with a new instrument calibration have discovered the rocks are rich in long-sought carbonate minerals. Comanche (left) and Comanche Spur (right) appear reddish-brown in this false-color image from Spirit's Pancam. (The bluish-wite rocks in the foreground belong to an unrelated outcrop.) Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2010-06-mars-rover-instrumentoutcrop-long-sought.html#jCp Sedimentary Rocks (?) on Mars NASA/JPL * Pancam image of rover tracks cutting through fields of blueberries. * “Blueberries” may be hematite. Sedimentary Rocks (?) on Mars This Mars Global Surveyor Image reveals the layered floor of western Candor Chasma in the great martian canyon Valles Marinaris. The uniform pattern -- beds of similar properties and thickness repeated over a hundred times -- suggest that deposition was interrupted at regular or episodic intervals. Patterns like this, when found on Earth, usually indicate the presence of sediment deposited in dynamic, energetic, underwater environments. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. © 2008, John Wiley and Sons, Inc.