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Weathering and the Production of Sediment

Weathering and the Production of Sediment. Surface Portion of the Geological Cycle. Types of Sedimentary Material. Terrigenous Clastics (TC) Detrital Particles Derived from pre-existing rocks Derived external to the depositional basin .

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Weathering and the Production of Sediment

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  1. Weathering and the Production of Sediment Surface Portion of the Geological Cycle

  2. Types of Sedimentary Material

  3. Terrigenous Clastics (TC) Detrital Particles Derived from pre-existing rocks Derived external to the depositional basin Transported by surface processes to the site of deposition Particulate Residues: quartz, feldspar, rock fragments, etc (unaltered rock forming mineral/rock grains) Secondary Minerals: minerals new-formed in the surface weathering environment: clay minerals, oxides, amorphous silica, etc Types of Sedimentary Material

  4. Types of Sedimentary Material • Allochemical Particles formed in situ at the site of deposition; of chemical/ biochemical origin • Carbonates: ooids, fossil fragments, pellets, lithoclasts • Glauconite, phosphate :insitu authigenic/particulate minerals • Biogenic sediments: pelagic tests, siliceous and calcareous

  5. Types of Sedimentary Material • Orthochemical Components • Chemical Precipitates • Secondary cement • Primary chemical sediments: halite, etc • Organic Particulate Material (detrital organic matter ) • terrestrial and particulate • marine pelagic • 95% found in mudrocks and indicative of low Eh and low current strength Laminated Castile Formation basinal evaporites. Dark laminae are calcite plus organic matter; light laminae are gypsum (Peter Scholle) Coal

  6. Tephra Types of Sedimentary Material • Pyroclasts • particles fragmented and transported by volcanic processes • Tephra: tuff deposits • Volcanic mudflows: lahar and volcanic breccia deposits Volcanic Ash

  7. Terrigenous Sediment

  8. Sedimentary Analysis • Goal: • study modern analogue to understand processes • identify processes which cause diagnostic characteristic features • unravel history • Requires description (qualitative, quantitative), analysis (graphical, statistical), interpretation

  9. Describing Siliciclastics • Description • Size • Texture • Fabric • Analysis • Maturity • Textural • Compositional

  10. Describing Siliciclastics(or how to have an intelligent discussion about rocks) • Classification • A necessary evil • An attempt to organize wide variety into few classes • Useful • Expect deviations, overlap and some which just don’t fit • Foundations • Grain type • Grain size • Transported or in situ • Different for each sediment type

  11. Describing Siliciclastics-Size • Size • Gravel and larger (> 2 mm) (conglomerate) • Sand (1/16 - 2 mm) (sandstone) • Mud (< 63mm = < 1/16 mm) (mudstone)

  12. Conglomerate and Breccia (> 2 mm)

  13. Sand becomes sandstone • (1/16 - 2 mm)

  14. Mud becomes shale • (< 63mm = < 1/16 mm)

  15. Descriptive Textural Classification: Ternary Plots G (gravel >2mm) - S (2mm>sand> 0.063mm)- M (mud<0.063mm) significance of gravel (>30%) min. transport energy S (sand) - C (clay<0.004mm)- S (0.063mm>silt> 0.004mm Siliciclastic Rock Classification: Texture

  16. Siliciclastic Rock Classification • Mineralogical Classification/terminology • Sand ----------->Arenites • CGL------------->Rudites • MDST----------->Lutites textural term mineralogical term • Arenites Petrology • Ease of analysis and sampling • Composition can be interpreted

  17. Describing Siliciclastics- Size Wentworth scale • Udden- Wentworth size scale • Udden, 1914; Wentworth, 1922 • Resolves problems with size classification • Cumbersome to discuss size • Limiting to restrict to 3 classes • Four basic groups + modifiers make more • Clay (< 4 mm) • Silt (4 mm - 63 mm) • Sand (63mm - 2 mm) • Gravel (> 2 mm)

  18. Siliciclastic Rock Classification:Texture • Descriptive Textural Classification • Grain Size • Uden-Wentworth grain size scale • Phi ()=-log2 (grain diameter in mm) • naturally occurring groups; • Gravel ~ rock fragments, • Sand ~ individual mineral grains (particulate residues) • Clay ~ chemical weathering products (clay minerals, etc.) • Mud ~ particulate residues +/- chemical weathering products

  19. Describing Siliciclastics- Size Wentworth scale (cont’) • Subdivided scale by factor of 2 • .0039 mm clay • .0078 mm very fine silt • 128 mm = cobbles • 256 mm = boulders • Logarithmic (base 2) progression! •  = -log2(grain diameter in mm) • As grain size increases, phi size decreases

  20. Describing Siliciclastics- Sedimentary Texture • Aspects of texture • Shape • Proportions of clastic: matrix • Degree of sorting • Surface texture • Result of • Parent rock type (shape) • Weathering • Transport history (sorting, shape) • Generally for siliciclastics but can be useful for other types

  21. Describing Siliciclastics • Form/Shape • Zingg indices • spherical (equant), oblate (disk or tabular), bladed, prolate(roller) • Roundness • Degree of angularity • Function of transport history • Edges chip off as clasts knock into one another (progressive) • Estimate visually or calculate from cross- section • Sphericity • How closely clast approximates a sphere (equant) • Inherited feature! (function of shape formed in weathering) • slab may become discoidal but stays flat with time

  22. Clastic Rock ClassificationTexture: Sorting & Shape • Sorting: measure of the diversity of grain size • A function of grain origin and transport history • Clast Rounding: surface irregularity • Due to prolonged agitation during transport and reworking

  23. Describing Siliciclastics • Fabric • Alignment of elongate clasts • Anisotropic (preferred direction) arrangement of particles • e.g., shale • Surface Texture • Pitted or not • Folklore says eolian transport leads to etching • Yes! • No!

  24. Describing Siliciclastics Clastic: matrix • Clasts • Fragment which makes up a sedimentary rock • Matrix • Finer- grained material which lies between the clasts • Relative difference! • Boulder/ cobble or sand/silt

  25. Describing Siliciclastics Degree of sorting • Measure of distribution of clast sizes • Well sorted • most clasts fall into one class on the Wentworth scale • Poorly sorted • wide range of clast sizes • Due to origin and transport history • Greater distance (or repeated agitation of sediment), better separation of sizes • Qualitative (visual) and quantitative methods

  26. Statistical/Graphic Presentation of Texture: Grain Size/Sorting • Quantitative assessment of the % of different grain sizes in a clastic rock • Mean: average particle size • Mode: most abundant class size

  27. Describing Siliciclastics Grain size analysis • Quantitative analysis • (granulometric analysis) • Quantitative assessment of % of different grain sizes in clastic sediments and sedimentary rocks • Useful in interpretting depositional history of clasts, especially in modern environments • Technique used varies with grain size • Direct • Indirect

  28. Describing Siliciclastics Grain size analysis- techniques • Gravel • direct measurement in the field • measure all within a quadrant • meter is used for pebbles, cobbles • Sand • pass through a stack of sieves with mesh keyed to  • weigh contents of each sieve, get distribution by wt. • Sandstones and Conglomerates (∑2d/n)/N • n=#grains cut by view; d = diameter of field of view; N = total # views counted • Coarse silt and finer • based on Stokes Law • particle will settle through water at a predictable rate • pipette • sedigraph (X-ray the sediment/ water solution)

  29. Describing Siliciclastics Grain size analysis- graphic analysis • Plots • Histogram of weight percentage of size fractions • Frequency curve • Cumulative frequency curve When plotted, grain size increases from right to left, fines to right, coarse to left • Graphically represent grain size distribution • mean grain size • standard deviation from a normal distribution (sorting) • symmetry (skewness) • flatness of curve (kurtosis)

  30. Describing Siliciclastics Grain size analysis- graphic analysis • Different depositional environments exhibit different grain size distributions • Glacial sediments • poorly sorted • River sediments • moderately sorted • Beach sediments • well sorted

  31. Statistical/Graphic Presentation of Texture; Granulometry

  32. Describing Siliciclastics Grain size analysis- graphic analysis • No unique solutions! • Need additional data • field observations • large- scale sedimentary relationships • sedimentary structures • facies associations • If sediments are eroded from rocks previously deposited, then misleading data can result • e.g., river (mod. sorting) may be transported sediments eroded from old beach rock (well sorted)

  33. Significance of Grain Size, Sorting and Rounding : Interpretive • Textural Maturity • Kinetic energy during transport and reworking • Transport history • Dispersal patterns • Caveat emptor! • Mixed sources • Biogenic reworking

  34. Describing Siliciclastics Maturity of Siliciclastic Material • Extent to which material has changed when compared to the starting material (e.g., granite) from which it was derived • Textural • Compositional/ mineralogical • Generally linked • High textural maturity leads to high compositional maturity

  35. Textural maturity • Clue to • Erosion, Transport, Depositional history • Independent of composition! • Generalizations • Maturity increases with energy input (same source) • higher downstream • Relative to starting material! • clean sandstone can have high maturity (if rounded) • Comparisons from different sources uncertain • different starting grain size and shape distributions not comparable

  36. Compositional maturity • Measure of proportion of resistant or stable minerals present in the sediment, to less resistant minerals • Sandstone with high maturity has mostly quartz • Strongly influenced by composition of source rock area Resistant Less resistant Quartz Feldspar Chert clasts Most other minerals Zircon Lithic clasts

  37. Cycles of Sedimentation • First cycle • Material is eroded, transported, deposited • Additional cycles • Burial, lithification, uplift, exposure, transport • Redeposition - second cycle of sedimentation • Increasing clastic detrital textural and mineralogical maturity with each cycle • Resistant minerals • Can survive repeated weathering, erosion, transport • Quartz, lithic fragments of chert, zircon (highly resistant)

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