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Sandstone Sandstone is the indurated equivalent of unconsolidated sand. Sandstone Sand includes clast with diameters of 2 mm to 1/16 (0.0625) mm. Also referred to as “psammites (Greek), and as “arenites” (latin). Arenites name still in use. Sandstone Sand grains constitute the framework of sandstones, and the pore may be entirely filled, partially or empty. Pore filling may be a combination of: Finer-grained primary or secondary clastic matrix Cement (typically calcite, quartz, chert, or hematite) Fluids such as gas, air, oil, and groundwater. Sandstone composition Sandstone composition is analyzed using a petrographic microscope and thin section. This allows for discriminating individual mineral species and rock fragments. Sandstone composition Quartz Sand grains can be composed of any mineral but monocrystalline quartz grains are by far the most abundant type of sandstone grain. Although monocrystalline quartz grains typically constitute 60-70% of sandstone, some sandstone are almost 100% quartz; other contains none. This is not surprising; quartz is common of granites, gneiss, schist that are abundant rocks in continents. Quartz is also resistant to weathering. Quartz sand in Puerto Rico Deposits in the north coast but also some deposits around the island. In the north coast they are up to 99.8% pure qtz. No sedimentary structure. Sandstone composition A Monocrystalline quartz typically Constitute 60% to 70% of sandstone. B C Med-sand size quartz grains sandstone: What appears to be pressure solution contacts are actually secondary qtz. overgrowth abutting into original pore space. A- under crossed nicols. B- under cathodoluminiscence Feldspars Feldspars is generally less abundant than quartz in sandstone, a 10% to 15% of sandstone composition. This is because, although they are more abundant in crystalline rocks such as granites and gneiss, they are less resistant to weathering. Implications for the presence of feldspars High feldspar content in a sandstone caries specific implications about source area climate and topography. Feldspar rich sands are produced in: Not extensive chemical weathering either because climate and/or high source relief. Low precipitation (arid setting) Artic climate where precipitation occurs as snow and ice rather than rain (limits hydrolysis). Topographic Relief Even in climates that usually promotes decomposition to clays (warm tropical climate), feldspars can survive if topographic relief is high because fastmoving streams will erode feldspar before it can be decomposed. K-feldspar (potassium) vs. plagioclase Potassium and plagioclase feldspar differ in abundance in sedimentary rocks. Potassium feldspar are more prevalent because they are more common in continental crust and more resistant to decomposition. Microcline (K-feldspar) shows the characteristic grid, twining Orthoclase (a K-feldspar) usually untwined. Rock (lithic) fragments Abundance of rocks fragments varies. Lithic fragments provide the most specific information about provenance. Granites and gneiss decompose as individual crystals grains. For that reason it is more common to find volcanic rocks, phyllite, shale, and chert. Texture of lithic fragments in SST B- chert A- volcanic C-plutonic D-metamorphic-foliated E- sedimentary Grain size Phi units Fixed ratio between each successive size clast boundary, each size is twice as large: 2, 1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16 = 2, 1, 0.5, 0.25, 0.125, 0.0625 Phi uses a logarithmic-based unit 8, 4, 2, 1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32 mm 23, 22, 21, 20, 2-1, 2-2, 2-3, 2-4 25 Grain size diameter in phi units = -log2 grain diam 2mm= 21 = -log2 2 = -1 phi Phi uses a logarithmic-based unit 8, 4, 2, 1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16 mm 23, 22, 21, 20, 2-1, 2-2, 2-3, 2-4 -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 ø Simple Histogram Bar diagrams plotted on graph paper using two arithmetic scales, one horizontal and the other vertical The height or length of the bars plotted on the vertical axis corresponds to the proportion of grains in each class (weight percent from sieve). Frequency curve It is a smooth curve that can be fitted to the bar diagram. It can be superimposed directly onto the bar a histogram simply by joining the mid point marks of each size class bar. Cumulative frequency curve It is produce by plotting the cumulative weight percent on the vertical axis, beginning with the coarsest size class. Probability graph Cumulative percentage are plotted on probability paper. The vertical axis is a log probability scale A standard horizontal axis. Normal bell-shaped distribution paper as straight lines when plotted on probability paper. Mean size = average size Median size = the diameter that splits the distribution into precisely equal halves. Modal size = most frequently occurring size, that is half of all the data are below the median, and half are above. Variation in grain size or Sorting Sorting express the number of significant size classes in a population. The implied significance of sorting is that transporting agents differ in their ability to entrain, transport, and deposit grains of different sizes. Skewness Skewness is a statistical measure of the symmetry of a distribution.In a normal bell-shaped distribution, mean, median, and mode coincide; the two halves of the distribution are mirror images. Size-frequency curve of three sediments having an identical sorting but different skewness. A- sediment is unskewes and shows sym. Dist. B- Positively skewed; the coarser half of the population shows better sorting than the finer half, so both the median and the mean are shifted toward finer grain size. C- negatively skewed finer half is better sorted than the coarser and the median and the mean are shifted toward coarser grain size. Modern beach sand tend to have Four segment distribution. Several ancient beach sand have the same four segment. Dune sand, better sorted and with A single large saltation population And only minor traction and suspension pop. Turbidites sands are very poorly sorted (shallow slope), with a single population Ranging from very coarse to very fine. Shape and roundness Sand grain shape (form) and roundness (angularity) are useful properties for describing and differentiating sandstone units. They are of limited value in identifying provenance, dispersal, and depositional mechanism (different environments will contain grains of similar shape). Zingg (1935) He used a caliper to measure the long, intermediate, and short axes of pebbles and defined four shape categories: equant, tabular or oblate, bladed and prolate. These categories are more useful for loose sediments than for cemented rocks. Visual comparison using a standard reference silhouettes is quicker and simpler. Shape Sand particles shape do not identify transport history or depositional environment definitively. Transport agents do not shape sand grains; rather, shape is inherited and is controlled by composition (mineralogy). Ex. biotite, slate, and phyllite = flakes Roundness or angularity It is a function of the curvature of the corners of a clasts rather than overall grain dimensions. Grain roundness represent abrasion history. It is a function of: Clast size Mineralogy - hardness and cleavage Transport agent - velocity and viscosity Grain surface The surface of sand grains display a variety of small-scale features ranging from pits, scratches, and ridges to polish or frosting. Usually require a Scanning Electron Microscope. Classification of Sandstone