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Published byGerald Brett Henderson Modified over 9 years ago
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Formation of Sedimentary Rocks Chapter 6.1
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Sediments Small pieces of rocks that are moved and deposited by water, wind, glaciers, and gravity When sediments are glued together, they form sedimentary rock.
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How do you get sediments? 1. Weathering: when rocks wear down. 2 types - chemical weathering: minerals in the rock are dissolved or chemically changed -physical weathering: minerals are NOT changed, rock fragments break off along fractures
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How do you get sediments? 2. Erosion: Removal and transport of sediment Four main agents of erosion – Wind – Water – Gravity – Glaciers
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Lithification Physical and chemical processes that transform sediments into sedimentary rocks Compaction – Weight of overlying sediments forces the sediment grains closer together Causes physical changes Cementation – Mineral growth glues sediment together into solid rock Dissolved minerals precipitate out of ground water
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Sedimentary Features Bedding – Horizontal layering of sedimentary rocks – Results from the way sediment settles out of water or wind – Two types of bedding Graded bedding – Particle size becomes progressively heavier and coarser toward the bottom layers Cross bedding – Formed as inclined layers of sediment are deposited across a horizontal surface – Small scale on beaches
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Ripple marks Occurs when sediment is moved into small ridges by wind or wave action, or by a river current – Back and forth motion creates symmetrical ripples – Movement in one direction creates asymmetrical ripples
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Sorting and Rounding Jagged edges are smoothed by the constant knocking into other grains – Amount of rounding is determined by how far the sediment has traveled – Harder minerals have better chance of rounding
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