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Sedimentary Rocks Chemical Sedimentary Rocks Limestone Chert – Silica Evaporites Organic Rocks Coal Oil and natural gas Chemical Sedimentary Rocks Clastic Sedimentary Rocks Formed from clasts (bits and pieces of pre-existing rocks) transported, deposited,and lithified Chemical Sedimentary Rocks Formed from precipitation of minerals within the depositional basin. Includes biominerals, evaporites, coal, chert, etc. Evaporites minerals precipitated from evaporating water Siliceous Rocks Silica and opalline silica precipitate either organically or inorganically Coal and Peat Carbon-rich deposits formed from build-up of plant material in swamps Carbonates Variety of limestones composed of calcite, aragonite, and dolomite precipitated either organically or inorganically http://csmres.jmu.edu/geollab/Fichter/SedRx/chembiokey.html Common Minerals: Carbonates - Limestone Biochemical (corals) Bioclastic (chalk, coquina) Inorganic – chemical precipitate travertine tufa oolitic limestone Calcite CaCO3 Aragonite CaCO3 Dolomite (CaMg)CO3 Corals and Snails Limestone Unlike other chemical sedimentary rocks, limestone is usually formed from loose sediment similar to clastic sediment. These kind of limestone are sometimes called bioclastic. It is therefore relatively easy to mistake limestone for a clastic rock unless you perform an acid test. Carbonates will react with acid; clastic sediments will not. Calcite and aragonite react energetically with rather weak acid. Dolomite will react sluggishly, and usually needs to be ground up to see a reaction with weak acid. Snails Some algae precipitate aragonite flakes and needles as skeletons. When they die, the skeletal bits become sandand mud-sized carbonate sediment. http://www.turtles.org/ http://www.geo.mtu.edu/FIELD_TRIPS/florida/ Lime mudstone - limestone with mud-sized carbonate grains. Comes in many different colors, and frequently contains fossils. http://www.ndc.edu/stones/newpage16.htm http://seis.natsci.csulb.edu/bperry/Sedimentary%20Rocks%20Tour/biochemical_sedimentary_rocks.htm Underwater dunes formed from carbonate sediment Fig. 06.22a Stony corals precipitate sometimes massive aragonite skeletons, which break up to form boulder- to mudsized carbonate sediment. Fringing coral reef around a island. As the volcanic island sinks, the coral growth keeps up, eventually forming a coral atoll. Chalk Limestone formed from the microscopic calcite skeletons of tiny animals. http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Coccolithophores/ Shell Coquina Shells cemented together with little or no matrix http://www.dep.state.fl.us/geology/geologictopics/rocks/anastasia.htm Inorganic Carbonates Limestone precipitated from dissolved ions in water, including: Seawater Hot springs Groundwater Evaporating basins Pore water Dissolved Solids in Thermopolis Hot Spring Total Dissolved Solids 2373 Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S) 4.5 “Hardness” (CaCO3) 1274 Thorium less than 0.6 Bicarbonate (HCO3) 755 Silica (SiO2) 82 Iron (Fe) 03 Lead 0.004 Magnesium (Mg) 76 Sodium (Na) 262 Potassium (K) 49 Sulfate (SO4) 760 Chloride (Cl) 328 Fluoride (F) 3.7 Nitrate (NO3) 10 Strontium 20 Lithium 2 Barium 2 Aluminum 1 Chromium trace Calcium (Ca) Boron 0.56 Manganese 0.02 Titanium 60 Zinc 2 Tungsten 0.01 Vanadium 0.1 Copper trace http://www.thermopolis.com/ Siliceous Sedimentary Rocks Microcrystalline quartz and opal precipitated from dissolved ions in sedimentary environments. Can be precipitated organically or inorganically. Microcrystalline quartz can also precipitate in pore spaces to form cement. http://www.diskworks.com/octoberopals/opal1.html Scanning Electron Micrograph (SEM) of tiny, siliceous skeletons of radiolarians, which are a source silica chert Chert nodules common occurrence of chert in other sedimentary rocks (this is limestone) Fig. 06.23a Bedded Chert Another common mode of occurrence in sedimentary deposits. Evaporites Minerals (halite, gypsum, sylvite etc.) precipitated from dissolved ions in basins from which water is evaporating. Evaporite Production H2O H2O H2O Evaporation 1000 ft Example: Minerals formed from dissolved ions as seawater evaporates Ionic Composition of Seawater Cations Anions Na Na+ 10,556 Mg2+ 1,272 ClCl (SO SO44)2- K+ K Ca2+ Ca 380 (HCO3)- 140 400 parts per million Common Mineral Salts NaCl - Halite KCl - Sylvite CaSO4•H2O - Gypsum 18,980 2,649 Total Ions: H22O: H O 34,387 ppm 965,613 ppm 35 o/oo normal marine salinity Other Mineral Salts KMgCl3•6H2O - Carnalite MgCO3 - Magnesite CaMg(CO3) - Dolomite CaSO4 - Anhydrite Basin of Seawater H2O H2O H2O Evaporation As the water evaporates, the ions become more concentrated, and different minerals precipitate. 1000 ft 15 ft 2.6 ft. Sylvite (KCl) and Mg-salts 11.8 ft. Halite - NaCl 0.5 ft. Gypsum - CaSO4 Shores of the Great Salt Lake, Utah http://speclab.cr.usgs.gov/PAPERS.calibration.tutorial/ Coal Sedimentary rock formed from the remains of plant material Coal comes in various grades, depending on the amount of post-depositional alteration: Peat Lignite Bituminous coal Anthracite (a metamorphic rock) http://geoinfo.nmt.edu/education/litegeology/images/coal.gif Coal is formed from swamp deposits It is derived from woody plants The buried material is compressed and heated in the Earth, driving off the water, increasing the carbon content. Higher carbon content = higher grade fuel Coal almost always contains pollution-causing impurities. http://www.fmnh.org/ coal bed Oil and Natural Gas Formed when microscopic organisms die and accumulate in an area of low oxygen, preserving organic matter. When sediments are compacted and heated, organic matter is transformed into hydrocarbons, producing oil and natural gas. http://www.sohoblues.com/GulfWarWeb/previewpages/previewpage5.htm