Transcript here

Today’s Lecture:
Chapter 7: Sedimentary Rocks
Sedimentary structures:
• Inferring depositional
processes from
sedimentary rocks
•Sea-level changes
& the facies concept
Sedimentary structures:
Features observed within a single bed.
Within sedimentary
beds, distinctive
structures can
usually be seen.
These include
systematic
variations in grain
size and sorting,
internal bedding
features, etc. that
are diagnostic of
particular
depositional
processes.
Sedimentary Structures
Graded beds:
Show a gradual
change in
particle size as
you move from
the bottom of a
bed to the top.
Bed 2
Bed 1
Fig. 7.26a
Stephen Marshak
Sedimentary Structures
Graded beds:
Show a gradual
change in
particle size as
you move from
the bottom of a
bed to the top.
Bed 2
Bed 1
Bottoms of beds: Coarser
Sedimentary Structures
Tops of beds: Finer
Graded beds:
Show a gradual
change in
particle size as
you move from
the bottom of a
bed to the top.
Bed 2
Bed 1
Graded Bedding
Finer
The bed to the
right shows a
change from
large grains at
the bottom, to
small at the
top. This is
called “normal”
grading.
Coarser
Graded Bedding
Lower Velocity
As transport
velocity declines,
coarser particles
settle out first
(see video
on turbidity
currents).
Higher Velocity
Graded Bedding
Lower Velocity
Thus, graded
beds tell us
how flow
velocity
changed
during
deposition!
Higher Velocity
Sedimentary structures: Cross-Bedding
Cross-bedding is
internal bedding
that is tilted at an
angle to the
primary bedding.
Cross beds are
formed by a scour
and fill transport
process involving
either wind or
water (see
ripple movie).
First we need to
distinguish between
primary bedding vs.
internal layering.
Primary bedding
vs. internal layering
Contacts between
sedimentary beds
Primary
Bed
Primary bedding
vs. internal layering
Internal,
inclined layers
Contacts between
sedimentary beds
Primary bedding
vs. internal layering
Internal
inclined layers
Contacts between
sedimentary beds
More cross-bedding
Bed contacts”
Fig. 7.25abc
W. W. Norton
More cross-bedding
Cross beds
Bed contacts”
Cross-bedding
Transport direction
Tilt-direction of cross beds indicates the
direction of transport (e.g., wind direction or
direction of water flow).
Large-scale cross-beds like these
What a geologist sees.
Which way did the wind blow?
What a geologist sees.
Paleowinds
Sedimentary Structures: Ripple Marks
Ripple marks form when moving wind or water
causes sedimentary grains to “hop” along the bottom.
Fig. 7.27a
Stephen Marshak
Ripple marks can be either symmetrical (formed by waves
sloshing back and forth), or symmetrical (formed by water
or wind flowing in one direction).
Transport and Deposition in Running Water
Ripple formation movie
Sedimentary Structures: Ripple Marks
Look closely at
the ripples on
this surface.
Are they
symmetrical, or
asymmetrical?
Which way did
the water
flow?
Sedimentary Structures: Ripple Marks
Look closely at
the ripples on
this surface.
Are they
symmetrical, or
asymmetrical?
Which way did
the water
flow?
Paleocurrent direction
Sedimentary Structures: Ripple Marks
Look at
these!
Study these ripple carefully.
Are they symmetrical or
asymmetrical? What do
they suggest about
paleocurrent direction?
Sedimentary structures: Ripple Marks
Oscillation ripples
(back and forth)
Interpretation: Paleoshoreline
Sedimentary Structures: Mud Cracks
Ancient mud cracks (cross-sectional view)
Fig. 7.27d
Stephen Marhsak
Sedimentary Structures: Mud Cracks
Mud cracks form
when mudcovered
shorelines or
lake bottoms,
dry up. This
produces an
irregularlycracked surface.
Margin of a dry lake
with mud cracks.
Note ripple-marked
sand dunes at top
of picture.
Sedimentary Structures
Note ripplemarked
sand dunes
at top
of picture.
Sedimentary structures: Mud Cracks
Say you find mud cracks in
an ancient sedimentary rock.
What does that suggest about the
environment where the rock formed?
Fig. 7.27c
Stephen Marhsak
What a geologist sees.
In class exercise:
Describe what you see in
this outcrop and interpret the
geologic history and conditions
of deposition.
Contains
“clasts” of older rocks.
Igneous clast
Metamorphic clast
Wavy basal contact
Fine layering
Ripple crossbedding
Wavy basal contact
Lower contacts cut into units
underneath. Erosional!
Bed shows size grading.
Finer top
Single bed
Coarser base
What a geologist sees:
Uplift of a deep-seated igneous
pluton (granitic), with subsequent
erosion by running water which
transported igneous and
metamorphic clasts to a river
which then carried them some
distance from the source area,
to a site of deposition (stream
channel).
Transport by running is inferred
by the rounding of the clasts,
size grading, and sorting.
Erosional contacts at the bases of
beds indicate initial turbulent
transport, followed by declining
flow velocity (flood event?).
Sedimentary environments
Concept of Sedimentary “Facies”
 “Facies” are representations of
sedimentary environments defined
by the overall association of features
preserved in rocks.