From the Latin sedimentum - settling
Sedimentary rocks make up only 5% (by volume) of the upper 10 miles of the crust, but about 75% of the outcrops on the continents.
Two primary types of sedimentary rocks:
- Chemical - precipitate from solution (e.g., limestone); most important constituents are calcite, dolomite, chalcedony (SiO2), gypsum, and halite. Chemical sedimentary rocks can be further divided as to:
- inorganic (e.g., limestone, rock salt, dolomite)
- organic (e.g., limestone or coal).
- Detrital, or clastic - detritus, or fragments, of other rocks (e.g., sandstone); the most important constituents are quartz, calcite, clay minerals (from the weathering of feldspars), rock fragments, and feldspars. They are composed of:
- clasts: the larger grains
- matrix: the finer-grained material surrounding the clasts
- cement: the material that binds the clasts and matrix together. Common cements include iron oxide, calcite, and silica.
Sediments become rocks by lithification
- compaction - lithification occurs as the weight of overlying sediments and rocks squeeze the sediments together into rock.
- cementation - precipitates from groundwater and the growth of secondary minerals between the fragments may cement the rock.
- recrystallization - minerals may reform or change owing to burial pressure and temperatures - does not necessarily make the rock metamorphic.
Walther's Law of Facies: A conformable vertical sequence of facies generated by a lateral sequence of environments. It can be paraphrased as what might be found vertically should also be found horizontally.
DETRITAL SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
Keys to identification and classification of sedimentary rocks:
- Grain size - depends on original material, length of time it has been transported, and under what conditions.
Size Range (millimeters) | Particle name | Sediment name | Detrital Rock |
> 256 64 - 256 4 - 64 2 - 4 | Boulder Cobble Pebble Granule | Gravel | Conglomerate (rounded fragments) or Breccia (angular fragments) |
1/16 - 2 | Sand | Sand | Sandstone |
1/256 - 1/16 < 1/256 | Silt Clay | Mud | Shale (laminated and fissile) Mudstone (non laminated) Claystone |
- Sorting - degree to which the particles are the same size, i.e. if all the particles are the same size, then they are well-sorted. The following figure shows an increase in sorting, from left to right, from very poorly sorted through to very well sorted.
If we had three separate samples of silt, sand, and gravel, each very well sorted in their respective containers, but the mixed all three together, we would end up with a very poorly sorted mixture.
- Grain shape - reflects the degree of abrading during transport, length of transport, and resistance to weathering and abrasion.
Particle sizes for the classification of detrital rocks
Conglomerate - clastic rock in which the fragments are larger than 2 mm in size; fragments have rounded sides and corners.
Breccia - clastic rock in which the fragments are larger than 2 mm in size; fragments have angular sides and corners.
Siltstone vs. Mudstone vs. Claystone - siltstone has visible silt particles; mudstone feels gritty when chewed; claystone feels smooth when chewed; all are generally non laminated.
Shale - general name for all of the very fine-grained siltstones, mudstones, and claystones that are laminated or fissile.
Arenite - rock composed of any material that is sand sized (e.g., a quartz arenite is composed of sand-sized particles of quartz).
Arkose - poorly sorted, clastic rock composed primarily of quartz and more than 25 percent of potassium feldspar giving it a pinkish color; usually formed from granitic rocks.
Greywacke - gray to black sandstones that have a fine-grained clay, mud, or silt matrix.
CHEMICAL SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
Derived by the precipitation of minerals from solution (e.g., calcite or quartz). Precipitation may be caused by an inorganic process (e.g., decrease in temperature or pressure) or by interaction with an organic process.
Useful chart for chemical sedimentary rocks
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Limestone - most abundant of the chemical sedimentary rocks; formed either by inorganic precipitation or by biochemical processes.
- Coquina limestone: a type of limestone composed of poorly cemented shells and shell fragments.
- Chalk: composed of the carbonate tests (shells) of foraminifera (small organisms as small as a pin head).
- Travertine: limestone formed by the evaporation of water.
- Oolitic limestone: composed of oolites which form as tiny seed particles act as the nucleus for calcite precipitation; need a swashing effect.
Chert - a variety of cryptocrystalline (no crystal structure) silica; formed by the precipitation of silica from solution.
- Flint: a variety of chert which is dark owing to the presence of carbon-rich material.
Coal - organic sedimentary rock composed of the remains of plant material. Various grades of coal include peat, lignite, bituminous coal, and anthracite coal.
DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENTS
Continental: on a land mass; usually detrital.
- Fluvial: in a river; detrital.
- Lacustrine: in a lake; detrital or chemical.
- Paludal: in a
swamp-like environment.
- Aeolian: by the wind; detrital.
- Arid: in the desert; detrital or chemical.
- Glacial: by a glacier; detrital.
- Deltaic: in a delta; detrital.
- Reef: usually detrital, occasionally chemical.
- Shelf: on the continental shelf; detrital or chemical.
- Submarine channel or fan: detrital.
- Pelagic: deep sea ocean floor; usually chemical.
- Linear: form long deposits (shorelines); can be detrital or chemical.
SEDIMENTARY STRUCTURES
A sedimentary structure reflects the depositional environment under which the rock was deposited.
Bedding - sediments are arranged into layers defined by bedding planes; usually horizontal, but may also be subhorizontal or curved.
- Graded bedding - bedding in which the particles are sorted according to density, size, and shape. Normal grading - densest particles on the bottom.
- Reverse grading - densest particles near the top.
- Density grading - normal for lithic fragments, reverse from pumice fragments.
Surface features - surficial features that indicate the depositional environment.
Ripple marks - wavy feature formed by wind, wave, or current.
- Asymmetric, or current ripples: indicative of flow in one direction; will have steeper sides on the down current side and gradual slopes on the upstream side (e.g., rivers).
- Symmetric, or oscillation ripples: indicative of back-and-forth flow; (e.g., tidal inlets). Both can be used to indicate which way is up in a stratigraphic section.
Mudcracks - cracks formed by the desiccation, or drying, of the mud; indicative of an environment that was wet and has now dried. Can be used as an indicator of stratigraphic up; wider portion of crack will point up.
Rain-drops - small imprints of rain-drops may also be found on some sedimentary rock surfaces; can be used to indicate which way is up in a stratigraphic section.