Sedimentary Rocks - McGraw Hill Higher Education
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Transcript Sedimentary Rocks - McGraw Hill Higher Education
Introduction to
Geography
Arthur Getis, Judith Getis, &
Jerome D. Fellmann
Physical Geography:
Landforms
Chapter 3
Overview
Earth Materials
Geologic Time
Movements of the
Continents
Tectonic Forces
Diastrophism
Volcanism
Gradational Processes
Weathering
Mass Movement
Erosional Agents &
Deposition
Glaciers
Waves, Currents, & Coastal
Landforms
Wind
Landform Regions
Earth Materials
Igneous Rocks
Sedimentary Rocks
Metamorphic Rocks
Igneous Rocks
Cooling & solidification of molten rock
Underground molten rock is magma
Above ground molten rock is lava
Composition of magma & lava + cooling rate
determines the minerals that form
Granite, basalt, pumice, obsidian
Sedimentary Rocks
Composed of particles of gravel, sand, silt, &
clay
Pressure & cementing processes cause
rocks to form
Large particles form conglomerates
Sand forms sandstone
Silt & clay form shale or siltstone
Organic materials form limestone or coal
Metamorphic Rocks
Formed from igneous or sedimentary rocks
by earth forces that produce heat, pressure,
or chemical reactions
Shale becomes slate
Limestone can become marble
Granite may become gneiss
Geologic Time
Earth formed 4.7 billion years ago
Current landforms are often millions of years
old
Early 20th century work by geologist Alfred
Wegener on continental drift helped to
explain how landforms developed over time
Movements of the Continents
Plate tectonics theory
Earth’s crust is outer, lighter portion of the
lithosphere
Lithosphere broken into 12 large and
numerous small plates that slide & drift over
the asthenosphere
Plate movement may be caused by
convection
Plate Boundaries
Divergent plate boundaries
Transform boundaries
Plates slide by each other horizontally
Convergent boundaries
Plates move away from each other
Plates move towards each other
Plate collisions can cause earthquakes along
faults
Convergent Movement
Convergent plates can cause deep-sea
trenches and continental-scale mountain
ranges
Heavy, but thin, oceanic crust tends to be forced
under continental crust
Deep trenches form at these subduction zones
Volcanoes and earthquakes are common in
subduction zones
For example, the Ring of Fire
Tectonic Forces
Diastrophism
Great pressure causing plates to fold, twist, warp,
break, and compress
Volcanism
The force that transports heated material to or
toward the earth’s surface
Diastrophism
Broad warping
Folding
Faulting
Escarpments
Rift valleys
Tsunami
Volcanism
Strato or composite volcano
Steep sides
Shield volcano
Gentle slopes
No explosion
Gradational Processes
Reduction of the land’s surface
Types
Weathering
Mass movement
Erosion
Weathering
Mechanical
Frost action
Salt crystals
Root action
Chemical
Oxidation
Hydrolysis
Carbonation
Mass Movement
“Mass wasting”
Downslope movement of material due to
gravity
Accumulation of rock particles at the base of
hills is talus
Erosional Agents & Deposition
Running water
Amount of precipitation
Length & steepness of the slope
Kind of rock & vegetation
Forms landscapes such as deltas
Stream Landscapes
Humid areas
Waterfalls
V-shaped channels
Floodplains
Meandering streams
Oxbow lakes, natural
levees, flooding
Arid areas
Lack of vegetation
increases erosional
forces
Temporary lakes
Alluvial fans
Deep, straight-sided
arroyos (wadi)
Buttes & mesas
Groundwater
Aquifers form in zone of saturation
Upper zone is the water table
Can dissolve soluble materials to form
stalactites, stalagmites, & sinkholes
Karst topography
Glaciers
Covered a large part of the planet only 1015,000 years ago
Large body of ice moving down a slope or
spreading outward on a land surface
Can move as much as 1 meter per day
Glacial Landforms
Glacial troughs
U-shaped valleys
Fiords
Tarns
Cirques
Arêtes
Outwash plain
Moraines
Waves, Currents, & Coastal
Landforms
Waves
Longshore currents
Deposition & erosion
Sandbars
Forms beaches & spits
Coral reefs & atolls
Formed by the secretion of calcium carbonate by
coral organisms in sunny, warm water areas
Wind
Abrasive action of sand & dust sculpts the
landscape
Dunes
Barchan
Loess
Landform Regions
A large section of the earth’s surface where a
great deal of homogeneity occurs