6.6: Summary
The topics covered in this chapter can be summarized as follows:
| Section | Summary |
|---|---|
| 6.1 Clastic Sedimentary Rocks | Sedimentary clasts are classified based on their size, and variations in clast size have important implications for transportation and deposition. Clastic sedimentary rocks range from conglomerate to mudstone. Clast size, sorting, composition, and shape are important features that allow us to differentiate clastic rocks and understand the processes that took place during their deposition. |
| 6.2 Chemical Sedimentary Rocks | Chemical sedimentary rocks form from ions that were transported in solution, and then converted into minerals by biological and/or chemical processes. The most common chemical rock, limestone, typically forms in shallow tropical environments, where biological activity is a very important factor. Chert and banded iron formation are deep-ocean sedimentary rocks. Evaporites form where the water of lakes and inland seas becomes supersaturated due to evaporation. |
| 6.3 Depositional Environments and Sedimentary Basins | There is a wide range of depositional environments, both on land (glaciers, lakes, rivers, etc.) and in the ocean (deltas, reefs, shelves, and the deep-ocean floor). In order to be preserved, sediments must accumulate in long-lasting sedimentary basins, most of which form through plate-tectonic processes. |
| 6.4 Sedimentary Structures and Fossils | The deposition of sedimentary rocks takes place according to a series of important principles, including original horizontality, superposition, and faunal succession. Sedimentary rocks can also have distinctive structures, such as cross bedding, graded bedding and mud cracks, that are important in determining their depositional environments. Fossils are useful for determining the age of a rock, the depositional environment, and the climate at the time of deposition. |
| 6.5 Groups, Formations, and Members | Sedimentary sequences are classified into groups, formations, and members so that they can be referred to easily and without confusion. |
Answers to Review Questions at the end of each chapter can be found in Appendix 2 .
- What are the minimum and maximum sizes of sand grains?
- How can you easily distinguish between a silty deposit and one that has only clay-sized material?
- What factors control the rate at which a clast settles in water?
- The material that makes up a rock such as conglomerate cannot be deposited by a slow-flowing river. Why not?
- Describe the two main processes of lithification.
- What is the difference between a lithic arenite and a lithic wacke?
- How does a feldspathic arenite differ from a quartz arenite?
- What can we say about the source area lithology and the weathering and transportation history of a sandstone that is primarily composed of rounded quartz grains?
- What is the original source of the carbon that is present within carbonate deposits such as limestone?
- What long-term environmental change on Earth led to the deposition of banded iron formations?
- Name two important terrestrial depositional environments and two important marine ones.
- What is the origin of a foreland basin, and how does it differ from a forearc basin?
- Explain the origin of (a) bedding, (b) cross-bedding, (c) graded bedding, and (d) mud cracks.
- Under what conditions is reverse graded bedding likely to form?
- What are the criteria for the application of a formation name to a series of sedimentary rocks?
- Explain why some of the Nanaimo Group formations have been divided into members, while others have not.