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Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ LAB 1 – REVIEW & INTRODUCTION TO SEDIMENTS & SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY OBJECTIVE Review some of the concepts and components of sedimentary geology: Weathering, Sediment Production, grains, cements, mechanical erosion, Rock Classification, Transport, Deposition, facies, Hiatus, Geological Time, Maps, Cross Sections, Tectonic settings & Wilson cycles from Introductory physical geology. MATERIALS Materials for this lab will be set out on the benches. Please keep all items with their trays. Return hand lenses, acid bottles to their carriers and rock test kits to the back SW drawer. Return binocular microscopes to the cabinets under the scales. Minerals in labelled trays 1 of each type as per first table below: Augite through Serpentine. Rocks: in labelled trays, 3 of each type: Volcanic tuff (porous, layered, friable), basalt (1. With plagioclase phenocrysts, 2. amygdaloidal basalt or andesite with quartz or chalcedony, and zeolites), Granite (1. weathered pegmatites from Nova Scotia for weathered and 2. Fresh Wards or small trays in white wire shelves for fresh), schist (fine grained, micaceous), amphibolite (foliated), gneiss (lineated, layered or foliated), shale (with leaf fossils), siltstone, sandstone (1.brown, weathered, friable, stained with limonite, 2. White with silica cement), conglomerate (with lithic pebbles), limestone (fossiliferous), travertine (porous, layered), chert (various colours not all black), coal. Bin of poorly sorted beach sand pebbles to dust, and one of clean well sorted coarse “Ottawa quartz sand” for grain size and sorting estimates. Apparatus: Clean white paper, weighing boats, sandpaper, lunch trays, rock test kits, acid bottles, hand lenses, binocular microscopes and lamps, beakers, ice, water. PRODUCTION OF SEDIMENTS AND SEDIMENTARY ROCKS I. Rocks, Minerals, Provenance and Weathering Some rocks are monominerallic others contain a few different minerals. Rock fragments eventually weather or abrade to smaller rock fragments (basalt etc., VRF = volcanic rock fragments; slate, chert, flint, fish teeth = SRF = sedimentary rock fragments; and mineral grains. Limestone blocks and rock fragments rarely survive in continental systems as transported particles as they are too soft and soluble. In marine carbonate facies they are abundant and siliciclastic material is rarer as it does not reach offshore to banks or reefs where limestone forms. Lithic sands are dark in colour and composed mainly of tiny sand grain sized rock fragments. Quartz is common to many different rock types as a primary abundant mineral or as later hydrothermal veins. It and the other Si02 minerals (agate, chalcedony, opal) are mechanically hard and chemically resistant so that they resist weathering and make gravelly, sandy or silty residues. Mature, second cycle and long 1|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ transported sands are quartz rich. Olivine is as hard as quartz but oxidized and reacts so it is rarely found in sediments. Softer minerals (micas, ferromagnesian minerals, carbonates, salts) tend to get dissolved in water, oxidized in air or abraded away during sedimentary transport. This chemical weathering produces: more or less soluble salts (Halite NaCl, Calcite CaCO3, Gypsum CaSO4-2(H2O)), oxide and hydroxide (bauxite, limonite, wad) or clay mineral (kaolinite, illite, montmorillonite, chlorite) residues. Close to eroding rock sources, heavy mineral residues are deposited along with sands and can indicate provenance = source (garnet, aquamarine, corundum, tourmaline: metamorphic rocks; epidote, topaz, zircon, diamond, gold, platinum: igneous rocks) and (apatite, chert, flint, petrified wood) sedimentary rocks. Examine, test and read about the following minerals to fill out the blank second table below and answer the following questions. II. Sediment particle shapes Minerals have definite chemical compositions and regular internal crystal structures. Because of this some minerals tend to have particular external crystal forms depending on environmental conditions. Due to crystal face development in hard and well formed minerals and cleavage planes, many minerals can fall on a flat side and tend to orient. Since sediments are deposited in flat horizontal layers, mineral particles can enhance this effect. Heavy minerals can collect in the troughs of ripple marks or on the slip face of dunes if winnowed by slight currents so placers often form layers with more gold or diamonds in them. Hard minerals with fracture only become rounded grains while those with cleavages or hard well formed minerals can be somewhat blocky as sant grains. Quartz can form hexagonal prisms but in igneous rocks is usually irregular and equant so it usually weathers to rounded grains. Garnet is often dodecahedral similar to a soccer ball but with flat sides. Corundum forms hexagonal prisms but has conchoidal fracture and basal parting. Feldspars are usually tabular or blocky. Augite and hornblende from igneous and metamorphic rocks are often blocky prisms or blades. Zircon makes stubby tetragonal prisms with pyramidal ends. Magnetite is usually octahedral or cubic in form. Magnetite grains also attract one another so magnetite ins sediments often joins together in strings along octahedral faces. Minerals can also break in irregular fractures or along particular planes of weak bonds to make flat cleavage surfaces. Minerals can have: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, or 6 cleavage directions depending on the mineral. Quartz, tourmaline, apatite, zircon and magnetite have conchoidal fracture while garnet fractures hackly or irregular. Micas (biotite, muscovite, chlorite) and clays (kaolinite, illite, montmorillonite and serpentine) tend to be flat crystals with one perfect basal cleavage but clay crystals are so tiny that they often appear as earthy masses. Pyroxenes, amphiboles and all types of feldspars are prismatic with 2 different cleavage directions. Minerals which occur as microcrystalline masses and those as fine grained veins in other rocks like chalcedony, opal and epidote, tend to weather as rounded sediment particles. Calcite is rhombohedral but so soft that it usually abrades to rounded particles in calcarenites and most carbonate sedimentary rocks with well formed rhomb crystals are recrystallized rather than deposited as such. Some rocks, especially sedimentary and regional metamorphic rocks, are inherently layered due to bedding planes, foliations, compositional differences (sand versus clay, quartzo-feldspathic versus micas or ferromagnesian minerals), shearing as in fault zones. When these rocks fall apart their particles tend to be flattened (skippy stones). Other rocks are massive or comprise unoriented uniform assemblages of mineral grains such as: sandstone, granite, gabbro, basalt, chert, flint, gneiss, quartzite. These rocks tend to make more equant particles when they weather or abrade to gravel and sand sized rock fragments. 2|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1. Read the paragraph and table above (or other tables on mineral physical properties) and examine or test the minerals to fill out the following table. The figure below that table relates to particle shapes and will be useful for you to interpret the shapes of mineral sand grains and whether they might make oriented sediments as in the last column. 3|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ A. Example: If the mineral is harder than Quartz (7 on Moh’s hardness scale or your testing) put an “x” in the space, if softer, leave it blank. Anything is as hard as itself and can abrade, polish or frost grains like that. B. Example: If a mineral forms as a residual weathering product of other rocks or minerals and is found in soils, put an “x” in its space, otherwise ignore and leave it blank. (32 points) Mineral Augite Biotite Calcite Chlorite Corundum Epidote Garnet Gypsum Halite Hornblende Kaolinite Magnetite Muscovite = Illite Plagioclase K-Feldspar Quartz Serpentine Zircon 4|Page Harder Than Quartz Heavier Than Quartz Residue In Soils Precipitate Matrix in from salty shales water Grains in sands Forms oriented grains Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ III. Sediment Production, Transport, Particle Shape, Grain Sorting, Grain Size, Sedimentary Deposition Introduction to Sediment production, transport and deposition. Sediments are produced by mechanical and chemical weathering of pre-existing rocks on land as per Section I above. Residues from this process are smaller lithic fragments, insoluble and mechanically hard mineral remnants, oxidized and hydrated, insoluble or concretionary precipitated soil minerals (formed above the water table when soils dry out). For example a bedrock lithology might be gabbro (coarse grained equivalent of basalt, made of olivine, augite, plagioclase, glass and magnetite with a few quartz amygdules or veins) or granite (made of Kfeldspar, plagioclase, quartz, micas and magnetite) but a soil developed on either parent rock could have quartz, clay minerals, calcite, and other and more iron oxides (hematite, goethite, limonite) in varying proportions because these minerals are stable at earth’s surface environments (cool, low pressure, moist, oxidized etc’ compared to igneous or metamorphic rocks at depth. With land elevations above sea level, sediment particles move downhill by transport agents like glacial ice, rain runoff or flood water, and wind. In fluids like water and air, big particles tend to fall close to sources and aren’t much transported, abraded or rounded. Smaller flatter particles like clay minerals or clay sized materials could blow downwind and move across whole ocean basin widths. Particle shapes, sizes and sorting: When fluids like air or water move they have mass, momentum, viscosity and the capacity to carry a sedimentary load. As these fluids slow down due to decreasing topographic or bathymetric gradient or expand into larger volumes as from a river channel flowing into a lake or ocean, the flows slow, lose momentum and begin to drop their heaviest particles. There are 2 different modes of transport for sedimentary particles in fluids like water or air: suspended by high velocity and turbulent motion relative to the particle size and rolling along near the riverbed, seabed or earth’s surface on land. The former are called suspended load. The latter are termed bedload. Suspended load can be transported great distances by laterally flowing winds or currents and they slowly settle out over 5|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ many hours to many days depending on how high they were suspended above the bed. They form relatively fine grained, gently blanketing uniform deposits such as mudstone, shale and deep sea ooze rich in microfossils. Granular particles from boulders and cobbles down to fine sand and silt size ranges are also transported by fluids like air or water. Generally particle size decreases with progressive transport distance as does rounding and quartz content (because everything else wears away). Particle size diminishes with increasing transport distance from the sediment source. Sorting, the uniformity or lack thereof of sediment particle size distributions, also tends to improve or to become more uniform as distance increases and energy of transport decreases. 2. On the figure below all of the pebbles (1-2 cm across) are made of many tiny quartz grains and are derived from eroded pieces of metamorphic quartzite. Look at the progressive change in particle shapes and rounding across the figure. Draw an arrow above this figure pointing towards the direction of greatest transport from the direction of least transport using a symbol like this >>-----. (2 points) Sediments and sedimentary rocks are classified by their predominant particle sizes. This is useful because it takes more energy to transport bigger particles. It is also useful because the different rock textures that result affect everything from how the rocks appear and weather to what their porosity is like and their potential value as reservoirs or other resources. As sediment is successively transported and re-deposited by flowing water such as along rivers or up and down beaches or offshore bars, the fines are progressively washed away to be deposited further away in deeper water, while the coarser, cleaner, sand and gravel sizes remain as a lag. Therefore sandy environments like beaches tend to have more “clean” well sorted sands or gravels with rounded grains. In contrast, debris flows in steep mountain streams or turbidity currents in submarine canyons can contain poorer sorted sediments or a range of grain sizes and more angular particles. Thus we can interpret poorly sorted sediments with a serial range of grain sizes as things that were transported quickly and just deposited once (like landslides or debris flows). Grain sizes are divided into 4 broad classes: Gravel and larger are particles > 2mm, sand is 2 mm to 1/16 mm ( 200 µ to 62.5 µ), silt is 1/16 mm to 1/256 mm (62.5 µ to 3.95 µ) and clay particle size is < 1/256 mm (~<4 µ ). 6|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. In the 2 examples above the grain size distribution (proportion of particles of successive sizes) varies. Plot 2 little cartoon bar graphs depicting the % of: clay, silt, sand and gravel. Assuming the “o” in the label “poorly sorted” is 0.1 mm = 100 microns or medium sized sand. (6 points) 4. Examine the cartoon figure above and read the caption. Then go back to the previous photograph of the 2 sediment samples with different sorting. Explain in a few words why well sorted sediments make the best reservoirs for fluids like aquifers or oil and gas reservoirs. (4 points) 7|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. Sediment Production: Provenance & Mechanical Weathering: Make and describe the grains (rock and mineral fragments) formed by mechanical abrasion of a rock and sandpaper onto a clean white piece of paper. Do this for 2 of: Tuff, Friable sandstone, Shale, Weathered granite, fine grained schist. Transfer your “sediment” to a weighing boat for examination by hand lens and binocular microscope. Also feel your sediment, roll it between your fingers to determine whether it is angular or rounded, uniform in size or variable, clean mineral grains or it leaves your fingers dirty with crushed cements or film of clay sized fines. A. Describe the compositions (lithic fragments: Sedimentary, Volcanic, Plutonic, Metamorphic, or minerals) of the sediment(s) you made. (4 points) B. Draw and describe the sizes of your particles (Gravel, sand, silt, clay) as well as their shapes. Include a scale bar with 0.1 mm divisions so that 1 mm is about 1 cm in your drawing. (6 points) C. Are there mineral cements present and if so what colour and mineral are these. Are there clays present? Identify this by wetting your dirty fingers or some of the fines and see if it makes mud that “slips”. For cements SiO2 is harder than class and even thedust portion you produced will polish, frost or scratch glass. For Fe oxides and hydroxides like limonite, goethite and hematite. Rinsing a small portion of your produced weathered sediment will leach yellow stain into a watch glass and leave a stain if decanted onto a filter paper. For chalk or limestones, your powder put in a watch glass with a few drops of acid will fizz. The calcite cements are soft and will not polish glass. Describe any cements or clays and tell how you identified them. . (6 points) 6. Sedimentary particles are transported by gravity with or without a fluid such as wind, water or ice. Most sediments start moving as mass wasting off slopes by rockfalls, landslides or solifluction off the side of slopes. A. Take 2 pieces of paper, lay one flat and place the other onto a tray which you can slowly tilt. Place your sediment on the tilt-able one at the top (far end of the paper). As you tilt it, note at what angle the sediment starts to move. Do this again this time with gentle tapping on the tray you are tilting to simulate an earthquake. Note the particle sizes that 8|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ move first and describe the effect on the critical slope angle of transport with the addition of gentle tapping. Put your sediment back in the plastic weigh boat for later use. Describe what happens as the result of tilting with and without tapping and draw a conclusion about the stability of loose sediment and particle size variations on various landscapes. . (6 points) B. Pretend you are the wind. Take some of your sediment on a piece of paper over another clean sheet on a lunch tray. Gently blow across your sediment towards the tray until sediment starts to move. Note which particle sizes moved first and were moved to the other sheet versus which were left behind. Estimate your wind speed by blowing with the same force over the garbage can and drop some confetti (paper punch outs). (Get help from a partner using a ruler and a stop watch to time how far your particles move at this wind speed. Express this velocity in cm/sec and kilometers per hour. Explain why the sediments sort and react this way to a single velocity, and relate it to the energy of your wind and its velocity or momentum versus your range of particle masses. Explain how this relates to dust storms and sediment transport. . (10 points) 9|Page Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 7. From the table’s above and below (p.11-13), classify the following sedimentary rock types as either the result of chemical or mechanical weathering, whether their texture is due cementation, compaction or crystallization, and note thir composition to classify them as detrital, chemical or biochemical / bioclastic sediments. (18 points) Weathering Texture & Lithification Composition/Class. Rock type Arkose Breccia Calcarenit e Diatomite Gypsum Shale 10 | P a g e Mech. w Chem. w Cemente d Compacte d Crystallize d Detr . Chem . Bio . Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The following 3 part rock classification table will help you examine and understand some common sediment and sedimentary rock types based on compositional differences and particle size and formative process in addition to how to fill out the classification chart above. 1.12 a. Siliciclastic rocks made predominantly of silicate rock fragments and silicate minerals. 1.12 b. Geochemical and biochemical sedimentary rocks made predominantly of materials precipitated from solution. Most limestones are directly produced by calcareous algae, bacteria or shell forming planktonic or nektonic organism. Diagenetic processes may replace original minerals by other materials such as rudist corals or siliceous sponges getting transformed to dolomite, wood getting replaced by silica or calcite (petrified), calcareous foraminifers getting replaced by pyrite. 11 | P a g e Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1.12 c. Bioclastic and biochemical sedimentary rocks made predominantly of organic or inorganic materials produced by living organisms. Chalk is made by the tests (mineral hard parts) of coccoliths (calcareous algae) and sometimes foraminifera (calcareous zooplankton). Diatomite in temperate to sub tropical lakes and high latitude open oceans is a rock made of microscopic tests of opaline silica of many species of siliceous phytoplankton. Chert in older rocks is often made of radiolarians which are microscopic tests of protista that are either zooplankton or zooplankton with symbiotic algae. Tropical warm, salty waters give rise to many forms of calcium carbonate particles. Whether large or small most are both bioclastic and biochemical from calcareous bacteria to coral heads. Coquina is a porous limestone mass of bioclastic shell fragments of one or more types of calcareous invertebrates, chiefly pelecypods in the Cenozoic. Peat is a cold climate or alpine deposit of cellulose from terrestrial plants in acidic bogs (bioclastic and biochemical made of roots, stems and twigs of mosses, sedges, heather, grasses, seeds, twigs, and roots. This is always unconsolidated and it never remains uneroded or becoms deeply buried enough to ever transform into a rock. Lignite is a soft brown low rank coal of tree trunks, twigs, leaves from shallow burial and slight compaction of forest species that fell into swamps or oxbow lakes in meandering river systems and deltas. Bituminous coal is high rank coal that has separated into various different classes of organic molecules and makes masses of brittle, black, light weight matter that is now ~75% carbon principally as aromatic compounds: anthracene, phenanthrene, napthalene along with waxes and other classes of organic molecules. Coals have only been formed since vascular plants conquered land in the Silurian Period. The thickest and most widespread deposits are Devonian, Carboniferous, Permian, Jurassic, Cretaceous and Paleocene/Eocene, all hothouse climate times when the carbon cycle on land was the most vigorous. 12 | P a g e Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ IV. Sedimentary Environments and Sediment Facies Wet or dry, hot or cold, steep or flat, fast or slow all matter in the making, transport and deposition of sediments. Biology and ecosystems also matter a great deal especially for bioclastic and biochemical sediments. These variables, climate, geography, underlying bedrock type, local tectonic processes and especially sea level or local base level on land matter a great deal as to how widespread or limited the different sedimentary environments are. Channels in rivers transport all 13 | P a g e Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ types of sediment at some stage but floodplains only receive silt and mud deposits at flood stages. Glacial facies are limited to high latitude, high altitude or ice age conditions. Deltas only form at river or stream mouths. Desert dune systems are only found in dry continental settings. Beaches are narrow transitional environments dependent on geography, tectonics and sea level. If conditions change, so do environmental boundaries and sedimentary facies. There are 3 classes of environments: terrestrial or continental, marine and transitional (beaches, estuaries, deltas). 8. Study the map and block diagram above to match a rock type or sediment to a particular environment for the list below. For “type” put continental, transitional or marine. Use simple 1 and 2 word facies as labelled for Environment. (12 points) Deposit or rock type Type: Cont./Trans/Mar. Specific Environment Poorly sorted cobble conglomerate Coarse sand with marine shells Muds with tree stumps and leaves Moraine with boulders in clay Bedded gypsum and halite Turbidites with graded beds Sedimentary facies vary laterally and give way to adjacent environments. The following block diagram shows how changing conditions such as transgression (sea level rise) or tectonic subsidence of a coast like that of B.C. could shift environments laterally and create vertical 14 | P a g e Geoscience 240 – W-2017 Lab 1: Review & Introduction to Sediments and Sedimentary Geology _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ stratigraphic sequences at a given location. This is a simple statement of Walther’s Law to explain vertical facies successions. No environment lasts forever nor does any one extend across the whole planet. Change is the only constant. When we find a stack of sedimentary rock with missing lateral facies, either the crustal or sea lavel motion was not uniform or some degree of erosion occurred. When we find sequential beds that are not adjcaent facies, we suspect there is an unconformity or missing time (hiatus in deposition). To some degree every stratigraphic contact is a hiatus or pause and change to a different environment. Another consequence of this reasoning is that stratigraphic contacts between the same pair of lithologies (rock types) are not a single event in time but they must vary laterally across a broad sedimentary basin. 9. What does the top of the block diagram represent. __________________________________ (1 point) _______________________________________________________________________________________________ 10. Draw a strip log similar to the one above, but have it represent a marine regression or local crustal uplift. Use the same 3 rock types. (3 points) 11. Draw another stratigraphic sussession with an unconformity or hiatus using the same lithofacies and a wavy line to represent the unconformity. _______________________ (3 points) 15 | P a g e