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Sedimentary Rock http://soest.hawaii.edu/coasts/cgg_main.html
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Sedimentary Rocks are the product of sediment deposition, diagenesis, and lithification
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Oceans rise and fall, lakes come and go, streams run and disappear, deserts become forests and forest become swamps…all these changes will be recorded in sedimentary rocks
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Sedimentary rock contains sediment grains, cement holding them together, and empty space called “pores”
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To understand Earth history, a geologist seeks to interpret the “Environment of Deposition” of a sedimentary rock…this reveals something about changes occurring on Earth’s surface Eolian Environment – grains of uniform size “well sorted” Coastal Environment – grains coarser and of mixed size Stream Environment – grains much coarser and “poorly sorted”
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Glacial Environment – grains very coarse with no sorting, but usually rounded Landslide Environment – grains very coarse with no sorting, with no rounding Marsh/Mudflat Environment – grains very fine
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Evaporite environment – chemical sediments Reef environment – biological sediments Deep sea environment ?? – Plankton sediment and clays from land
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Sedimentary Structures…. Sedimentary rocks tend to form layers or strata…each layer records a depositional event Cross-beds – former dunes
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Ripple marks Mud cracks modern ancient
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Sediment becomes sedimentary rock…the texture and composition of the sediment determine the type of sedimentary rock
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Two types of sedimentary rock – Clastic Sedimentary Rock – made of pieces of broken crust Biochemical Sedimentary Rock – made of precipitated minerals Conglomerate Rock Salt
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Clastic Sedimentary Rock Conglomerate/Breccia – gravel texture Sandstone – sand texture Shale – silt/clay texture Biochemical Sedimentary Rock Limestone – CaCO 3 composition Chert – SiO 2 composition Coal – Carbon composition
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Pressure forms coal How does coal form?
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Coal strip mine…
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Environments of deposition Sedimentary texture Sediment composition Global Climate history Clastic – Biochemical sedimentary rox Breccia/Conglomerate Sandstone Shale Limestone Chert Coal How does coal form? Sedimentary structures
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But why was there an ice age?
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Ice stores O 16 so that oceans are O 16 depleted in an ice age
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+ O 18 /O 16 - CaCO 3 Layer by layer sampling of plankton reveals oxygen isotope record Periodicity of 100,000 yrs
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100 kyrs 41 kyrs 21 kyrs
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These were made during an ice age!
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