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Published byArnold Parks Modified over 9 years ago
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Sedimentary Rocks — The Archives of Earth History
? Disconformity
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There are actually 3 types of rocks…
Igneous – cool from liquid (magma or lava) Metamorphic – pre-existing rocks that have been altered by intense temperature or pressure Sedimentary – form mainly from deposition of sediments
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Historical geology focuses on sedimentary rocks
•Why??? Only rocks that contain fossils Indicate ancient depositional environments
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What is a sediment? Fragment of pre-existing rock (or animal shell)
Why does water off Galveston look murky, while water off Florida looks clear?
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What kind of rocks do we find around Houston?
Not many rocks! Lots of unlithified sediment Why do many houses in Houston have foundation problems?
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What is a sedimentary rock?
Rock that forms at or near Earth’s surface 3 types Clastic Chemically-precipitated Biogenic
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How do clastic sedimentary rocks form?
Weathering Transport Deposition Lithification
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How do other sedimentary rocks form?
Chemical – precipitation of dissolved materials Biogenic (organic) – accumulations of organic material
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Environments of Deposition
At or near surface of Earth Marine Continental Transitional (deltas, barrier islands, beaches)
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Marine Coastal Shelf Deep water
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Continental Fluvial Desert Lacustrine Glacial Meandering Braided
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Continental Fluvial Desert Lacustrine Glacial Meandering Braided
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Continental Fluvial Desert Lacustrine Glacial Meandering Braided
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Dune Cross-Beds Large-scale cross-beds in a Permian-aged wind-blown dune deposit in Arizona
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Continental Fluvial Desert Lacustrine Glacial Meandering Braided
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Continental Fluvial Desert Lacustrine Glacial Meandering Braided
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Moraines and Till Origin of glacial drift
Moraines and poorly sorted till
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Delta Form in oceans or lakes (marine and non-marine)
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Stream/River-Dominated Deltas
long distributary channels extending far seaward Mississippi River delta
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Where would you find different sedimentary rocks?
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Where would you find different sedimentary rocks?
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Where would you find different sedimentary rocks?
Grain size is controlled by energy High energy River Beach Low energy Lake Deep ocean Large grains Small grains
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Sorting, Rounding If the size range is not very great,
the sediment or rock is well sorted If they have a wide range of sizes, they are poorly sorted Wind has a limited ability to transport sediment so dune sand tends to be well sorted Glaciers can carry any sized particles because of their transport power, so glacier deposits are poorly sorted Grains more rounded with longer transport
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Rounding and Sorting A deposit of well rounded and well sorted gravel
Angular, poorly sorted gravel
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Cross-Bedding Tabular cross-bedding forms by deposition on sand waves
Tabular cross-bedding in the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation in Montana
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Current Ripple Marks form in response to water or wind currents flowing in one direction asymmetric profiles allowing geologists to determine paleocurrent directions
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Wave-Formed Ripple Marks
As the waves wash back and forth, symmetrical ripples form Wave-formed ripple marks in shallow seawater
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Modern Deposition near Houston
Fluvial Brazos, Colorado, Trinity, San Jacinto Rivers Transitional Deltas, barrier islands Marine Gulf of Mexico
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Ancient Environments Important for historical geology
Important for oil companies (need to know where sand was deposited) Why are we looking at modern depositional environments?
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Present is the key to the past
Study modern depositional environments to learn about ancient ones Knowledge of ancient environments helps oil companies and historical geologists
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Brazos River Longest river in Texas – 1450 km
Highest sediment supply of any Texas river Originates in New Mexico
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Where does deposition occur?
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Point Bars Sediment deposited within the inside bank of a meander loop
Fining upward sequence (grain size decreases) Coarsest sediment deposited by highest energy
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Brazos River – Point Bar
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Brazos River – Cut Bank
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Coastal – Galveston Island
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Barrier Islands Formed during sea level rise
Rate of SL rise and rate of sediment deposition approximately equal Wave-dominated environment
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Barrier Islands On broad continental margins with abundant sand, long barrier islands lie offshore separated from the mainland by a lagoon Barrier islands are common along the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts of the United States Subenvironments of a barrier island complex: beach sand grading offshore into finer deposits dune sands contain shell fragments (not found in desert dunes) fine-grained lagoon deposits
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Barrier Island Complex
Subenvironments of a barrier island complex
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Texas Coast Most Texas beaches relatively fine-grained
Low gradient of rivers like Brazos Why is this a problem?
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Brazos Delta gulf.rice.edu
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Environmental Interpretations and Historical Geology
Present-day gravel deposits by a swiftly-flowing stream (Most transport and deposition takes place when the stream is higher) Nearby gravel deposit probably less than a few thousand years old
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Environmental Interpretations and Historical Geology
Conglomerate more than 1 billion years old shows similar features We infer that it too was deposited by a braided stream Why not deposition by glaciers or along a seashore? No evidence for either glacial activity or transitional environment
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