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Formation of Sedimentary Rocks Section 6.1 Weathering Weathering – a set of processes that breaks rock into smaller pieces Sediments – pieces of rock that are moved and deposited by water, wind, glaciers, or gravity Sediments are “glued together” to form sedimentary rocks Sediments can range greatly in size Weathering Compare and contrast physical and chemical weathering. Rock fragments break off along fractures or grain boundaries Erosion Erosion is the removal and transport of sediments 4 agents include Wind Water Gravity Glaciers Eroded material is almost always moved downhill Deposition Deposition occurs when transported sediments are deposited on the ground or sink to the bottom of a body of water Deposition occurs when transport stops The largest grains will settle at the bottom with the smaller grains at the top – sorted deposition Energy of Transporting Agents Fast-moving water transports large particles better than slow moving water Wind can move only small grains Glaciers move all sizes with equal ease and deposited unsorted Landslides deposit sediments downhill in a jumbled mass Sedimentary Features Ripple marks form when sediment is moved into small ridges by wind or wave action or by river current Symmetrical vs. Asymmetrical The amount of rounding is influenced by how far the sediment has traveled The harder the mineral, the better chance it has of becoming rounded Sedimentary Features Fossils are preserved remains, impressions, or evidence of onceliving organisms Organisms die and are buried before they decompose What information can fossils provide?