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5.3: The Origins of Beach Sand

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    31617
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    The individual bits of materials on a beach are called grains, as in grains of sand. Individual grains generally consist of a single mineral, defined as solids of inorganic material with a unique chemical composition and crystalline structure. Rocks consist of aggregates of minerals and non-minerals according to Fullerton College emeritus geology professor Richard Lozinsky, aka “Doc Rock” (Lozinsky 2010). Thus, sand grains and their minerals come from rocks (as we shall see).

    Close inspection of the grains of sand from a typical Southern California beach will show that the sand consists mostly of white or clear grains, identified as the mineral quartz; yellowish grains, identified as the mineral feldspar; and gray or black grains, identified as the mineral biotite. Identification of the minerals present in a sample of sand provides clues as to where the sand originated. They can also help detectives catch criminals, a field called forensic geology (e.g., Ruffell and McKinley 2008).

    Three major types of rocks can be found on Earth:

    • Igneous rocks, rocks originating from the solidification of magma (molten material below Earth’s surface) or lava (molten material extruded onto Earth’s surface)
    • Sedimentary rocks, rocks formed from the fragmentation and consolidation of other rocks
    • Metamorphic rocks, rocks modified by heat, pressure, and fluids

    According to Best (1995), igneous-type rocks comprise nearly 65 percent of the rocks found in Earth’s continental crust and more than 95 percent of rocks forming the seafloor. Sedimentary rocks make up about 8 percent of the volume of Earth’s continental crust and less than 2 percent of oceanic crust. Metamorphic rocks make up slightly more than 27 percent of Earth’s continental crust and a small percentage of oceanic crust.

    Earth’s rocks rarely remain the same. Any of these three rock types may be transformed into another. Geologists refer to these transformations of rock and the processes that cause them as the rock cycle. Plate tectonics plays a major role in the transformations of the rock cycle. But a number of processes on Earth’s surface also alter the properties of rocks, as we shall see.


    This page titled 5.3: The Origins of Beach Sand is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.