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Sedimentology Grain Mineralogy Reading Assignment: Boggs, Chapter 5 Key Concepts I. II. III. IV. V. VI. Context of crust composition and surface rock composition Quartz Feldspar Rock fragments Other grains Classification Sedimentology Grain Mineralogy (1): Crustal composition Reading Assignment: Boggs, Chapter 5 Crust Composition: Elements There are 92 naturally occurring elements, but most are rare. Crust Composition: Minerals Common Silicate Minerals: Feldspar, Quartz, Olivine, Pyroxene, Amphibole, Mica Silicate Minerals Crust Composition: Minerals Common Silicate Minerals: Feldspar, Quartz, Olivine, Pyroxene, Amphibole, Mica Common Non-Silicate Minerals: Carbonates, Oxides, Sulfides, Phosphates, Salts Silicate Minerals Crust Composition: Minerals Common Silicate Minerals: Feldspar, Quartz, Olivine, Pyroxene, Amphibole, Mica Common Non-Silicate Minerals: Carbonates, Oxides, Sulfides, Phosphates, Salts There are ~ 3000 minerals But 10 account for 90% of crust! Silicate Minerals Crust Composition: Rock Type Continental Crust: Granite ~ 60% Feldspar, 25% Quartz 10% Mica, Amphibole Sedimentary Rocks: Mudstones, Sandstones, Carbonates Crust Composition: Rock Type Continental Crust: Granite ~ 60% Feldspar, 25% Quartz 10% Mica, Amphibole Sedimentary Rocks: Mudstones, Sandstones, Carbonates Net Result: Grain Types • Most common grains produced is some type of Feldspar (~60% of granitic crust) • But Feldspar weathers rapidly • Quartz, already abundant, is enhanced on Earth surface because it is resistant to weathering • Rock Fragments – mostly sedimentary, but can be metamorphic or volcanic • Note: Granite or Gneiss rock fragments are classified with Feldspar Breakdown of Primary Grain Types • Quartz • Plutonic = “common quartz” • Volcanic • Metamorphic = composite/polycrystalline • Recycled sediment • Vein (from final magmatic stages) • Feldspar • Alkali Feldspar (Mostly K-Feldspar = K-spar) • Plagioclase • Intergrowths of K-spar & Plagioclase • Rock fragments • Sedimentary (SRF) • Metamorphic (MRF) • Volcanic (VRF) End of Part 1 Sedimentology Grain Mineralogy (2): Quartz Reading Assignment: Boggs, Chapter 5 Quartz Mineral Characteristics • Hardness (7). • Chemically stable SiO2 tetrahedron • Can be present in: • monocrystalline form- (most stable) • composite grains • Quartz is the most common sedimentary grain (65% of average sandstone) • How do we identify it in thin section? • • • • Extinction under polarized light (straight to highly undulatory) Grain shape (subequant to bipyramidal) Inclusions & vacuoles Colors ranges from clear to a wide variety of colors caused by inclusions Quartz extinction in polarized light https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fn_9OXbcFY8 Extinction in granitic quartz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HpTENXNj8es Undulose extinction in stressed quartz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0eDfox-0i0 Range of Extinction Straight extinction Range of Extinction Slightly Undulose Extinction Range of Extinction Strongly Undulose Inclusions & Vacuoles Inclusions /vacuoles look like needles or bubbles within the quartz crystal Plutonic Quartz • Typically from granitic source (continental crust) • The ultimate weathering product from granite • Characteristics • monocrystalline • Subequant shape • Straight extinction with polarized light • Few vacuoles or inclusions monocrystalline Sub-equant Straight extinction Volcanic Quartz • Volcanic source • Distinctive bipyramidal shape • Straight extinction • Few inclusions or vacuoles vacuoles bipyrimidal Metamorphic Quartz • Composite/polycrystalline • Interlocking crystals, sutured contacts • Can be elongate (schist) • Undulatory to strongly undulatory extinction Sutured contacts polycrystalline Undulatory extinction Metamorphic Quartz polycrystalline • Composite/polycry stalline • Interlocking crystals, sutured contacts • Can be elongate (schist) • Undulatory to strongly undulatory extinction polycrystalline Vein Quartz • Forms in final magmatic stage (plutonic bodies) where volatiles are abundant • Common vacuoles & inclusions (often called “milky” Quartz) End of Part 2 Sedimentology Grain Mineralogy (3): Feldspars Reading Assignment: Boggs, Chapter 5 Feldspar Family Alkali feldspar – • Solid solution series from KAlSi3O8 → (K, Na)AlSi3O8 → NaAlSi3O8 • Most common are K-feldspar • Orthoclase (KAlSi3O8) • Microcline (NaAlSi3O8) Feldspar Family Alkali feldspar – • Solid solution series from KAlSi3O8 → (K, Na)AlSi3O8 → NaAlSi3O8 • Most common are K-feldspar • Orthoclase (KAlSi3O8) • Microcline (KAlSi3O8) Plagioclase feldspar• Solid solution series from NaAlSi3O8 (Albite) → CaAl2Si2O8 (Anorthite) • General formula (Na,Ca)(Al, Si)Si2O8 Feldspar Mineral Characteristics • Most common mineral in Earth crust • Hardness (6) = less than Quartz • Chemically unstable, commonly altered, weathers to clay minerals • Pink, white, gray, brown in color • Untwinned to distinctive twinning habit in Plagioclase & Microcline • K-spar appears similar to Quartz, identified by staining techniques K-Feldspar – Staining to differentiate from quartz K-Feldspar – Grid Twinning in Microcline K-Feldspar – Grid Twinning in Microcline K-Feldspar – Dissolution & Alteration Plagioclase - Twinning Plagioclase – Alteration & Dissolution Perthite – Intergrowth of K-Spar & Plagioclase End of Part 3 Sedimentology Grain Mineralogy (4): Quartz Reading Assignment: Boggs, Chapter 5 Rock Fragments • Sedimentary rock fragments (SRF) • Chert – microcrystalline quartz • Glauconite – marine, typically from fecal pellets or organic material • Shale, siltstone, mudstone, sandstone • Metamorphic rock fragments (MRF) • Slate, schist (gneiss is considered Feldspar for classification) • Volcanic rock fragments (VRF) • Glass, tuff Rock Fragments- SRF SRF – Claystone & Shale SRF - Siltstone SRF - Sandstone SRF – Limestone, Fossil, Dolomite SRF - Chert Rock Fragments- MRF MRF - Slate MRF - Schist Rock Fragments- VRF Glass, dissolution Tuff w/ Glass shards Rock Fragments- Plutonic Other Grains - Biogenic Glauconite Plant Red algae Coal Other Grains - Inorganic • Heavy minerals (s.g. > 2.9) • Most common zircon (very stable) ,rutile, magnetite (opague), pyroxene, amphibole, mica Other Grains - Inorganic Muscovite Opaque Mineral Zircon Amphibole Classification – Primary Tool for Determining Source Area/Provenance Questions You Should be Able to Answer 1. How many naturally occurring elements? Which are most common in the Earth’s crust? What are the 2 most common? 2. What are silicate minerals? Why are they so common in the Earth’s crust? What are the common silicate minerals? Which two are most common? 3. What are common groups of non-silicate minerals? 4. What is the general mineral composition of granite? 5. What rock types compose the crust by volume? By surface cover? 6. What is the most common sedimentary rock? 7. What are the 3 main types of sedimentary grains? 8. What are the characteristics of the mineral Quartz? 9. What are the origins of Quartz grains? What are the distinguishing characteristics of each type? Which type is most common? Why? 10. What does the extinction pattern in Quartz tell you? 11. What are inclusions in grains? Vacuoles? How do they form? 12. What are the characteristics of Feldspars? 13. What is the overall structure of the family of Feldspar minerals? How do these plot on a tertiary diagram? 14. What are Alkali Feldspars? What are the most common types? What is the general chemical composition? What are the distinguishing characteristics that allow you to identify these? 15. What are Plagioclase Feldspars? What are the most common types? What is the spectrum in chemical composition across this solid-state series? What are the distinguishing characteristics that allow you to identify these? 16. How do you identify mineral alteration to clay and dissolution in Feldspars? 17. What types of intergrowths of Feldspar minerals are common? 18. What are the main types of rock fragments seen as sedimentary grains? 19. What is chert? 20. What is glauconite? 21. What features allow you to identify a sedimentary rock fragment? 22. What are the types of metamorphic rock fragments? How would you identify these? 23. How do you identify igneous rock fragments? 24. What is the basis for classification of grains on the standard tertiary diagram? You need to be able to reproduce this diagram, and know the composition of Quartzarenite, Arkose, Litharenite, etc… 25. What is the purpose of the classification of grains by mineralogy/type?