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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Earth Systems 3209 Unit: 3 Earth’s Materials Reference: Chapters 2, 3, 6, 7; Appendix A & B
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks Unit 3: Topic 4.6 Focus on... Identifying the processes that form biochemical sedimentary rocks. Identifying different biochemical sedimentary rocks and the environment in which they form.
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Chemical Sedimentary Rocks (Biochemical) vBiochemical Sedimentary rock created when organisms use materials dissolved in air or water to build their tissue. Examples include: Coquina Chaulk Chert Limestone (Coral) Coal
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Examples of chemical sedimentary rocks include: 1) Coquina Organic rock of biochemical origin. forms from the build-up, compaction, and cementation of the shells of dead organisms. Chemical Sedimentary Rocks (Biochemical)
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Agate Examples of chemical sedimentary rocks include: 2) Chert is a name used for a number of very compact and hard rocks made of microcrystalline silica (e.g., flint, jasper, agate). most formed in ocean. occurs as layers (beds) & as irregular blobs in limestone. marine creatures such as Diatoms and Radiolarian remove silica from sea water to make shells. Chemical Sedimentary Rocks (Biochemical)
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Examples of chemical sedimentary rocks include: 3) Limestone (Coral) creating large quantities of marine limestone from their shells and external skeletons which are composed of calcium carbonate. 4) Chaulk formed as a result of the build-up, compaction, and cementation of microscopic marine organisms (ex. Foraminiferia). Chemical Sedimentary Rocks (Biochemical)
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Examples of chemical sedimentary rocks include: 5) Coal the end product of large amounts of plant material that has been buried and chemically altered over millions of years. Chemical Sedimentary Rocks (Biochemical)
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Biochemical Sedimentary Environments EnvironmentRock Types Swampcoal Shallow Marinecoquina, limestone (coral) Beachcoquina Deep Marinechaulk, chert Summary
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Example 1: Which is a biochemical sedimentary rock? (A)conglomerate(B) chaulk (C) sandstone(D) shale
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Example 2: Which biochemical sedimentary rock is made from microcrystalline silica? (A) coquina(B) coal (C) chert(D) limestone
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Your Turn... Take the time and complete the following questions... (Solutions to follow) Question: Which biochemical sedimentary rock seen to the right was deposited in a shallow marine environment? (A) coquina(B) coal (C) chert(D) jasper
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Solutions... Question: Answer: Which biochemical sedimentary rock seen to the right was deposited in a shallow marine environment? (A) chert (B) coal (C) coquina(D) jasper
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Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Summary... Overview of Points covered: Biochemical Sedimentary rocks include; Coquina Chert Limestone (Coral) Chaulk Coal Biochemical Sedimentary environments include; Swamp Shallow Marine (Ocean) Beach Deep Marine (Ocean)
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