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Indicators of different environments - recap Fragmental? • Made of fragments • Clasts • sedimentary rock What environment does this picture show? • Shallow marine • What features in rocks would you see? • Fossils – Corals are the main here – environmental indicators (clear, warm, shallow, marine, aerated seas) – TROPICAL • Rocks? – Limestone • Texture: well sorted, fine grain size, test with dil HCl fizz reaction (therefore it is a carbonate) • If you can see BROKEN fossils or fragments – it implies … strong currents What environment does this picture show? • River aka Fluvial • Fluvial is when a river or a stream where there are sediments that are being transported down by water. The deposits are formed by a river. • What features in rocks would you see? • Coarse debris such as boulders and sand are the type of sediments in fluvial. • Texture: coarse grain size (indicates strong current/fast flow), finer material shows processes of abrasion and attrition have worn the fragments down What environment does this picture show? • Lake aka Lacustrine • Lacustrine environments consist of sediments that have been transported by a river or stream but the water has ponded up and settled • What features in rocks would you see? • The sediments are fine grained and consist of silt and clay. • Texture: fine grain size (indicates little current) What environment does this picture show? • Desert aka Aeolian • Deserts are types of areas that almost have no rain and are considered to be very warm and dry areas. • What features in rocks would you see? • The most common type of sediment in the desert is sand. • The colour might be RED – as any iron has been OXIDISED • Texture: fine grain sizes (the wind can only blow small grains – the process is called deflation) • Cross bedding • Sediment blown up the gentle stoss side, is dumped on the leeward side What environment does this picture show? • Swamp • still shallow water which tends not to move very much (stagnant). • What features in rocks would you see? • The sediments in swamps mostly consist of very dark brown mud which was created due to the water. • Texture: Plant material rich (peat), partly rotted with fine grained sediments What environment does this picture show? • Delta • Landform created at the mouth of a river or a stream where water most likely to flow into large body of still water • What features in rocks would you see? • Sediment deposition which water carries the sediments in rivers, suddenly stops Texture: coarse material dropped first (proximal - closest to land), finer material carried further away (distal) What environment does this picture show? • Alluvial fan • when a river dumps sediment in a shape of a fan at the mouth of a mountain canyon. • What features in rocks would you see? • The rocks that have formed on the alluvial fan have some large pieces of sediment • Texture: coarsest closest to land, angular fragments Igneous rocks …. • Cooling history? • Interlocking crystals igneous • Coarse crystal size slow cooling PLUTON deep underground • Mineralogy quartz, feldspar, mica granite • What if porphyritic? Felsic or Mafic? • The most common felsic/acidic rock is granite, mineralogy includes quartz, muscovite, orthoclase, and plagioclase feldspars. • Common rock-forming mafic/basic minerals include olivine, pyroxene, amphibole, and biotite. Common mafic rocks include basalt, dolerite and gabbro. Igneous rocks …. • Cooling history? • Interlocking crystals igneous • Medium crystal size moderately slow cooling large mass, not on surface, but not deep crust • Dyke, sill …. Check for concordance • Mineralogy dark-coloured hornblende crystals and white feldspar crystals dolerite Igneous rocks …. • Cooling history? • Interlocking crystals igneous • Fine crystal size fast cooling on surface lava flow • Vesicles – trapped gases • Columnar jointing - cooling cracks • Mineralogy plagioclase feldspar, pyroxene, olivine, low quartz content basalt Igneous rocks …. • • • • Cooling history? Interlocking crystals igneous Olive green colour olivine Peridotite mantle composition