Cross bedding and other indicators in sedimentary rocks What is so important about understanding how these sedimentary rocks look the way they do?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Rocks made of bits & pieces of other rocks.
Advertisements

Slow Changes to Earth’s Surface
ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS
Chapter 8:Sediments & Sedimentary Rocks Utah sandstone (USA) Intro. Video for Flowchart.
Sedimentary Structures Clues to depositional environments.
Guided Notes About Sedimentary Rocks
Section 3: Sedimentary Rock
Sedimentary Rock c. Classify rocks by their process of formation.
SEDIMENTARY ROCK Section 6.3.
6.1/6.2 Guided Notes Hybrid. Weathering, Erosion and Deposition Produces Sediments: small pieces of rock that are moved and deposited by water, wind and.
Do Now: What are Sedimentary rocks?.  Explain the processes of compaction and cementation.  Describe how chemical and organic sedimentary rocks form.
Unit 9-2: The Rock Cycle: Sedimentary Rocks. Well, I’ve broken out of wrestling, and now have to get the the set of another Scorpion King movie. I’ve.
Sedimentary Rocks Sedimentary rock is formed by erosion
Formation of Sedimentary Rocks 8 th Grade Earth and Space Science Class Notes.
Essential Questions How are sedimentary rocks formed? What is the process of lithification? What are the main features of sedimentary rocks? Copyright.
Minerals The substances that make up rocks and Earth’s surface.
Sedimentary Rocks are Formed from Earlier Rocks
Geology 12: Sedimentary Facies and Structures Facies: distinctive body of sediment Gravel On-shore fluvial Near-shore marine Off-shore marine Chert High.
Today’s Lecture:  Sedimentary structures: Inferring depositional processes from sedimentary rocks Sea-level changes & the facies concept Chapter 7: Sedimentary.
SEDIMENTARY ROCK. Sediments to Sedimentary Rock Sediment & Sedimentary Rock Formation video uYqs Sedimentary.
Section 1: Wind Erosion Preview Key Ideas How Wind Moves Sand and Dust
Sedimentary Rocks Earth Science.
White Sands Nat’l Monument, NM
The Grand Canyon By: Leah Bahlman. Water How was the Grand Canyon formed? The Colorado River cuts through the Colorado Plateau. For 6 million years, the.
Earth Science Notes SEDIMENTARY ROCKS. Objectives I can… Explain what Sedimentary Rocks are Explain the processes that create sediments and sedimentary.
Key Ideas State the principle of uniformitarianism.
Rocks Section 3 Section 3: Sedimentary Rock Preview Objectives Formation of Sedimentary Rocks Types of Sedimentary Rock Chemical Sedimentary Rock Organic.
Weathering and Erosion
Agents of Erosion & Deposition
Sedimentary Rx pages  For thousands, even millions of years, little pieces of our earth have been eroded-- broken down and worn away by wind.
Table of Contents Title: 6.1 Formation of Sedimentary Rocks Page #: 36 Date: 11/28/2012.
Agents of Erosion Notes
Sedimentary Rocks. Land sedimentary environments Mountains – Formed on bedrock. Steep slopes allow sediment to travel far. Desert – wind picks us fine.
Erosion and Deposition Pages D58-D64. Mass Wasting.
Sedimentary Rocks Sedimentary rocks form when sediments harden into rocks 3 main kinds clastic, chemical and organic Most of Earth’s crust is covered by.
Chapter 6 Prepared by Iggy Isiorho for Dr. Isiorho Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks Index 
Sedimentary Rocks Rocks made from sediments. The majority of rocks seen on the earth’s surface are sedimentary rocks.
Section 3: Sedimentary Rock
Sedimentary Rocks.
Mrs. Hutson.   Sand is a product of weathering, which breaks rock into pieces.  Over time, sand grains may be compacted, or compressed, and then cemented.
The Earth’s surface is covered in sedimentary rock This rock is made from sediments. That are cemented together. Sediments are pieces of solid materials.
Chapter 4 Section 3 Sedimentary Rocks. What You Will Learn Describe the origin of sedimentary rock. Describe the three main categories of sedimentary.
Earth History: Investigation 4 Sandstone & Shale.
The Rock Record Section 1 Section 1: Determining Relative Age Preview Objectives Uniformitarianism Relative Age Law of Superposition Principle of Original.
Earth Science Notes Wind Erosion. Objectives I can… Explain how wind changes the Earths surface Describe the different types of Wind Erosion Describe.
Sedimentary Rock Formation. Formation Pre-existing rocks must be broken down Sediments: bits & pieces of pre-existing rock 2 general ways for this to.
Identifying Rocks Sedimentary rocks. Rocks are partly identified by origin: Origin-beginning Original.
Notes Sedimentary Rocks.
Rocks made of bits & pieces of other rocks.
Sedimentary Rocks.
Sedimentary Rocks.
How Rocks are Formed: Sedimentary
Sedimentary Rocks!.
Welcome Back Geologists!
Section 1 – Wind Erosion Wind contains energy. It an turn a wind turbine or move a sailboat. It can also erode the land. Sand vs. Dust Sand is loose.
Sedimentary Rocks.
Weathering, Erosion and Deposition
Weathering and Erosion
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS.
Welcome to Earth Science
Weathering and Erosion
Sedimentary Rock There are 3 main kinds: 1. Chemical
Sedimentary Rocks.
Section 1: Formation of Sedimentary Rocks
Earth Science Chapter 3 Section 3
Rocks made of bits & pieces of other rocks.
Section 1: Formation of Sedimentary Rocks
Types of sedimentary Rocks
Streams play an important role in erosion
Rocks made of bits & pieces of other rocks.
Presentation transcript:

Cross bedding and other indicators in sedimentary rocks What is so important about understanding how these sedimentary rocks look the way they do?

Bedding, no it has nothing to do with where you sleep Virtually all sediments clastic or chemical are deposited in layers. This can be their most prominent characteristic. Bedding that is very fine or thin is termed lamination. Some of these may be many meters thick Each visually distinct layer that corresponds to a particular period of deposition is a single stratum (plural, strata) Do not confuse with “facies”: This is an aspect, appearance and characteristic of a rock unit usually reflecting the conditions of how it was made

What is this? What kind of environment does this represent?

What is “cross bedding” This is not a good example of “cross bedding”

Breaking the principle Every once in a great while the principle of original horizontality gets broken. Take a sand dune. With each blow of wind sand grains are dislodged down the slope of the dune, forming layers that are inclined. The same thing can happen under water (sub-aqueous dunes). As the dune continues to form and advance sand from the top is moved by down the slope, eroding the old top of the dune slope. So over time a sedimentary deposit is created with inclined surfaces bounded on the top by an erosion surface. We can recognize this in the rock record as cross-bedding.

Looking at this massive cross bedding, what can you say about the size of the desert environment that left these? Using the trees as a reference point gives you an idea of how deep this ancient dune field was.

Another example of cross bedding.

Cross Bedding on another planet This picture was taken by one of the mars rovers. If you were a scientist that was looking for life how important would this image be to you?

Aeolian and Fluvial processes It is hard for geologists to determine that the some cross bedding were once sand dunes(Aeolian), because cross bedding is created in many different ways. Geologists have used the study of sedimentary environments to understand for example “the Navajo Sandstone”. They have discovered that the cross bedding in the Navajo almost exactly resemble the cross bedding that form in sand dunes. Sand dunes are mounds of sand moved by the wind (Aeolian). They commonly form in dry Earth surface environments.

Aeolian (wind) From observing active sand dunes, we know how they form cross bedding. Viewed from one end, sand dunes have a flat back side and a steep front side. The wind blows up the back side of the dune. If the wind moves fast enough, it will pick up and transport sand grains up the back of the dune. When the wind goes over the top of the dune, it slows down. This causes it to drop the sand grains it was carrying. The cross-bed gets flatter at the bottom because some of the sand rolls down to the bottom of the dune and piles up.

Modern dune cross bedding

Fluvial (water) Cross-beds of many different shapes and sizes are also made in water environments (Fluvial), such as beaches, rivers, and the deep-sea. One of these is trough cross bedding. Cross- bedding in which the lower surfaces are curved erosional contacts which result from scour and subsequent deposition. Large scale bed forms are periodic and occur in the channel (scaled to depth). Their presence and morphologic variability have been related to flow strength

An outstanding example of Trough Cross Bedding

Cross bedding not associated with sand dunes This kind of cross bedding occurs when a stream deposits sediment into a slow moving body of water.

Trough Cross bedding

Saltation and Creep Sand undergoes two physical processes. Sand grains if they are heavy or the wind is weak may only roll along the surface (creep). Grains that become airborne will rise up, and then return to the surface either bouncing off a larger stone or dislodging another grain that will also get airborne (saltation). About 75 percent of sand is moved by saltation and 25 percent by surface creep.airborne

Saltation versus creep Remember that the size of the particle determines the process of transportation.

How do sand dunes become rocks? Sand dunes become sedimentary rock through cementation. This happens in several stages. First, after the sand dune forms, it is usually buried below the Earth’s surface as newer sand dunes cover it. Second, during and after the dune is buried, water within the ground begins to move through it. The water flows in the spaces or pores between individual sand grains. This water often contains dissolved silica (SiO 2 ) or calcium (Ca) and carbonate (CaCO 3 ). If the chemical conditions are right, the third stage, cementation, will occur. Quartz or calcite crystals will precipitate in the spaces between the sand grains. They will grow until the spaces are filled up, effectively cementing the sand together.

Photo taken at the Great Sand Dunes National Park in Colorado

Well known Aeolian sedimentary rocks Sand dunes are common in two modern sedimentary environments: beaches and deserts. The size and shape of the beds in the Navajo Sandstone, along with other sedimentary features found in it, indicate that it was formed in a desert environment. Land fossils in the Navajo, including petrified wood and the footprints of lizards and dinosaurs, further suggest that the unit formed during the early Jurassic Period of the Mesozoic Era, about 150 million years ago. The Navajo Sandstone covers an area of 1,500,000 square miles of the southwestern United States. This indicates that during the Jurassic Period, this part of the United States was like the modern Sahara Desert of Africa.

This is the “Wave” very unique depositional/erosional environment

This is the Sahara Desert of present day This is what paleontologists think that a large area of what is now Colorado, Arizona, Utah and New Mexico looked like more then 150 million years ago

Another view of the Sahara Desert

Modern ripple marks Compare these to the next slide, are they familiar, could they have been made in the same environments?

These ripple marks are over 160 million years old Do these look like the marks in the previous slide? What kind of ecosystem could have existed there?

Cross Bedding on another planet This picture was taken by one of the mars rovers. If you were a scientist that was looking for life how important would this image be to you?