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Published byOliver Lyons Modified over 8 years ago
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Rocks
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Sedimentary rock: formed by pieces of rock carried by water, wind, or ice Warm-Up: What was your favorite food you ate on Thanksgiving? How are rocks and minerals related? What are some everyday uses for rocks?
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Metamorphic rock: formed by high heat, high pressure, or both Warm-Up: How could sedimentary or igneous rock change to metamorphic? How could igneous or metamorphic change to sedimentary?
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Shield volcanoes: broad, gently sloping cones Warm-Up: List the 3 types of rocks and explain how each forms
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The Earth’s surface is constantly changing due to the theory of plate tectonics Earth’s rocks are classified into three categories Igneous rocks: formed by the cooling and crystallization of magma Make up 95% of the earth’s crust Examples: Basalt, granite
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Sedimentary rocks: formed from pieces of other rocks carried by water, wind, or ice Most common on the earth’s surface Examples: sandstone, shale, limestone Metamorphic rocks: formed from older rocks that are changed by high temperature, high pressure or both Examples: marble, slate
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Some Igneous rocks form at the earth’s surface Igneous rocks that form at the earth’s surface are called extrusive Magma can differ in the amount of silicon it contains What does silicon determine? Melting temperature
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Higher amounts of silicon = thick, more viscous magma What does viscous mean? Gooey, sticky Lower amounts of silicon = thinner, faster flowing magma Spilled milkshake vs. spilled milk Basaltic magma- important low-silicon, fast- flowing magma
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Temperature also affects magmas ability to flow Hotter magma flows better than cooler magma Lava – magma that flows onto the surface of the earth Lava most commonly comes out of fractures and cracks in the earth’s surface called fissures Can also come out of a central vent or volcano
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Lava can come up through cracks underwater or on land Some igneous rocks form below the earth’s surface These rocks are called intrusive Large intrusive rocks are plutons Concept check: Why is it incorrect to say that igneous rocks may form from the intrusion of lava? How could you correct the statement?
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Most common rock on earth’s surface Covers 2/3 of the Earth’s surface
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Volcanism constantly makes new rock and weathering is the opposite process; it breaks down rock Two kinds of weathering Mechanical– physically breaks rocks into smaller pieces chemical- chemical reactions that involve water and decompose rock into smaller pieces Erosion- process that removes weathered rock particles and transports them by wind, water, or ice
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When transportation stops, deposition and sedimentation begin Deposition – particle being transported stops and is deposited Larger grains are deposited first Grains end up sorted by size
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Sedimentation – sediment particles are deposited one layer at a time As sedimentation builds up it starts changing into sedimentary rock Occurs in two ways: compaction- layers are pressed together and water is squeezed out cementation- chemicals in the water fill the pores and act like a glue to hold the grains together
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Clastic Sediments – sediments composed of small fragments of other rocks Three most abundant: shale, sandstone, conglomerate Limestone and evaporitesare also sedimentary rocks Sedimentary rock contain fossils
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Why would sedimentary rock contain fossils? Fossils are important for information about the past Fossil Fuels- oil- Sediment is buried and heated over a long period of time Natural gas – higher temperature coal- plants that do not completely decay
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All three types of rock can undergo change and becomes metamorphic Example of metamorphism: Potter’s clay NO MELTING OCCURS! Recrystallization – minerals in a rock change because the rock is exposed to high temperature and pressure Mechanical deformation- rock is subjected to physical stress deep in earth’s crust
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Two Kinds of Metamorphism contact- occurs when a body of rock is intruded by magma causes increased grain size due to recrystallization Near contact = low water content, larger crystal size regional- rocks change when subjected to physical stress and heat over a large region Found a lot in mountains Heat and pressure can produce beautiful gems
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Foliated Metamorphic Rock – has a layeredappearance Examples: slate, schist, gneiss Nonfoliated metamorphic rocks have a smoother appearance Foliation only develops if the pressure is high enough, if not, we get nonfoliated rocks Examples: marble, quartzite
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