Lecture 6: Sedimentary Environments
Sedimentary Basins
Basin: a depression in the crust covering a large area; deeper part in crust or ocean.
Tectonic activity is the most important control.
Subsidence: the sinking of land.
Lowering of land due to weight of deposits.
Along the margins or from continued deposition can cause the land to further depress.
Allows more sediment to deposit there and create another layer.
Tectonic setting (applied stress)
Type of rock (resistance)
Sediment transport medium (flow like wind, water, or glaciers)
Active processed in depositional environment (physical, chemical, or biological processes)
Climate
Natural agents that change sediment to solid rock (pressure, cement)
Time
Controlled by tectonic activity
Craton: stable interior of a continent (like the nucleus of a continent); where we will find the oldest rock we can find on the planet.
Shield: old crystalline basement rock that is exposed to the surface.
Platform: surrounds shield where ancient sediments were accumulated.
Orogenic belts: Elongated regions bordering craton; was deformed by compressional forces.
The prefix Oro- means mountain building.
Depositional environment: The geographic location where sediments accumulate.
Refers to environmental factors under which sediment is deposited.
Using uniformitarianism
Shallow Marine
Continental shelf: submerged edges of continents.
Larger grains are heavier than smaller ones
Above wave base, waves are active and break things down - sandstone
Below wave base, siltstone and mudstone
Turbidity Currents and Turbidites
Turbidity current: a fast-moving, sediment-laden flow of water that travels down underwater slopes, driven by gravity and density differences, often resulting in the deposition of graded beds.
Triggered by earthquakes, tsunamis, etc.
Common in deep water environments
Graded beds: A sedimentary layer characterized by a gradual change in particle size from coarse at the bottom to fine at the top.
Deep Marine
As you move away from continental slope, sea ooze deposit from single celled organisms.
When they die, they sink to the bottom and create limestone.
Reefs
Biological in origin: algae, sponges, and other marine invertebrates.
Warm shallow tropical regions.
Carbonate: anything related to calcite carbonate.
Commonly found in minerals such as calcite and dolomite, as well as in sedimentary rocks like limestone.
Example: corals
Depending on energy and type, rivers can carry sizes from clay to boulders.
Sand and gravel fill concave-up channels.
Fine sand, silt, and clay are deposited on flood plains.
Resulting rocks: sandstones, mudrocks, conglomerates
Mostly in desert environments
Conglomerates, breccia, arkose
Lacustrine - lake
Accumulate fine grained sediment and algae, resulting in mudrocks and shale.
Calm conditions
Glaciers: Large groups of rocks that move down and carves out our landscape and then deposits the sediments as it travels.
Till: Unsorted and unstratified sediment deposited directly by a glacier, consisting of a mixture of clay, silt, sand, gravel, and boulders; massive poorly sorted material; angular due to lack of weathering.
Tillite: A sedimentary rock formed from the consolidation of glacial till; angular and poorly sorted, not influenced by water.
Aired deserts (wind blown sediments)
Sandstones and siltstones
Quartz sandstone, mudstone, sandstone
River meets the ocean
Shape and sediments controlled by the balance between marine destruction processes and sediment supply
Sandstones, siltstones, mudstones, possibly carbonates, coals.
The rock record of depositional environments, including all possible elements that can be used for recovering the physical, chemical, and biological processed occurred during deposition.
As a direct consequence to these processes, we describe sedimentary rocks by their facies.
Use color, texture, composition, and sedimentary structures.
Color
Red/reddish rock - iron that has been oxidized
Greenish rock - may contain iron that has been reduced
Brown/black/very dark gray rocks - may contain large concentrations of organic matter
Sediment Textural
Textural maturity: sorting, roundness and sphericity.
Well sorted sediments: uniformly-sized grains imply constant reworking by water or wind.
Roundness and sphericity: sediment grains are rounded during weathering and transportation.
Most mature will be the most rounded and same material.
In felsic rocks, grains are commonly cemented by either calcite, iron oxides, or silica.
Features of cement may require observation under microscope.
Gravel → Sand → Silt → Clay
Compositional maturity: the amount of stable minerals
Quartz is the most stable and very resistant
Sediments composed of predominantly quartz are compositionally mature sediment
Sediments containing quartz, feldspar, rock fragments are compositionally immature sediments
Composition of Sandstone
Quartz sandstone: mature
Graywacke sandstone: immature
Decrease of grain size towards the ocean.
Longer transportation distance and higher energy → better compositional and textural maturity.
When clay dries out, it contracts inward, which allows materials to deposit in the cracks.
Tells us rock formed in dry environment
Sand moved by wind, streams, and coastal waves.
Helpful to determine current direction (direction of flow)
Aka cross-stratification
Arrangement of beds or laminations in which one set of layers is inclined relative to others
Formed via wind or water
Direction in which beds slope is an indicator of current direction
Cross-Bedding in a Delta
The succession of inclined forest beds is deposited over bottom-set beds that laid down earlier.
Top-set beds are deposited by the stream above the forest beds
Graded Bedding
Results when flowing water sorts particles by size
Clay settles last
Lithofacies: A facies is part of a rock body that has characteristics from which we can infer depositional environment
Litho → lithological (means stone or rock)
Bio → fossil assemblage
Sedimentation during a transgression event produces an on-lap relationship in which finer offshore lithofacies overlie nearshore facies.
Nearshore facies are progressively displaced away from a marine point of reference, and older beds are protected from erosion by younger beds.
Dependent on vertical change
Effects of rising or falling sea level on different coasts
Contents of a geologic map
Basic topographic features
Rock units: Group, Formation, Member
Time constraints: Cambrian, Silurian, etc.
Strikes, Dips, Faults, and Folds
Scale and legends
Cross section
Topographic profile
Extension of layers towards subsurface
Sedimentary Basins
Basin: a depression in the crust covering a large area; deeper part in crust or ocean.
Tectonic activity is the most important control.
Subsidence: the sinking of land.
Lowering of land due to weight of deposits.
Along the margins or from continued deposition can cause the land to further depress.
Allows more sediment to deposit there and create another layer.
Tectonic setting (applied stress)
Type of rock (resistance)
Sediment transport medium (flow like wind, water, or glaciers)
Active processed in depositional environment (physical, chemical, or biological processes)
Climate
Natural agents that change sediment to solid rock (pressure, cement)
Time
Controlled by tectonic activity
Craton: stable interior of a continent (like the nucleus of a continent); where we will find the oldest rock we can find on the planet.
Shield: old crystalline basement rock that is exposed to the surface.
Platform: surrounds shield where ancient sediments were accumulated.
Orogenic belts: Elongated regions bordering craton; was deformed by compressional forces.
The prefix Oro- means mountain building.
Depositional environment: The geographic location where sediments accumulate.
Refers to environmental factors under which sediment is deposited.
Using uniformitarianism
Shallow Marine
Continental shelf: submerged edges of continents.
Larger grains are heavier than smaller ones
Above wave base, waves are active and break things down - sandstone
Below wave base, siltstone and mudstone
Turbidity Currents and Turbidites
Turbidity current: a fast-moving, sediment-laden flow of water that travels down underwater slopes, driven by gravity and density differences, often resulting in the deposition of graded beds.
Triggered by earthquakes, tsunamis, etc.
Common in deep water environments
Graded beds: A sedimentary layer characterized by a gradual change in particle size from coarse at the bottom to fine at the top.
Deep Marine
As you move away from continental slope, sea ooze deposit from single celled organisms.
When they die, they sink to the bottom and create limestone.
Reefs
Biological in origin: algae, sponges, and other marine invertebrates.
Warm shallow tropical regions.
Carbonate: anything related to calcite carbonate.
Commonly found in minerals such as calcite and dolomite, as well as in sedimentary rocks like limestone.
Example: corals
Depending on energy and type, rivers can carry sizes from clay to boulders.
Sand and gravel fill concave-up channels.
Fine sand, silt, and clay are deposited on flood plains.
Resulting rocks: sandstones, mudrocks, conglomerates
Mostly in desert environments
Conglomerates, breccia, arkose
Lacustrine - lake
Accumulate fine grained sediment and algae, resulting in mudrocks and shale.
Calm conditions
Glaciers: Large groups of rocks that move down and carves out our landscape and then deposits the sediments as it travels.
Till: Unsorted and unstratified sediment deposited directly by a glacier, consisting of a mixture of clay, silt, sand, gravel, and boulders; massive poorly sorted material; angular due to lack of weathering.
Tillite: A sedimentary rock formed from the consolidation of glacial till; angular and poorly sorted, not influenced by water.
Aired deserts (wind blown sediments)
Sandstones and siltstones
Quartz sandstone, mudstone, sandstone
River meets the ocean
Shape and sediments controlled by the balance between marine destruction processes and sediment supply
Sandstones, siltstones, mudstones, possibly carbonates, coals.
The rock record of depositional environments, including all possible elements that can be used for recovering the physical, chemical, and biological processed occurred during deposition.
As a direct consequence to these processes, we describe sedimentary rocks by their facies.
Use color, texture, composition, and sedimentary structures.
Color
Red/reddish rock - iron that has been oxidized
Greenish rock - may contain iron that has been reduced
Brown/black/very dark gray rocks - may contain large concentrations of organic matter
Sediment Textural
Textural maturity: sorting, roundness and sphericity.
Well sorted sediments: uniformly-sized grains imply constant reworking by water or wind.
Roundness and sphericity: sediment grains are rounded during weathering and transportation.
Most mature will be the most rounded and same material.
In felsic rocks, grains are commonly cemented by either calcite, iron oxides, or silica.
Features of cement may require observation under microscope.
Gravel → Sand → Silt → Clay
Compositional maturity: the amount of stable minerals
Quartz is the most stable and very resistant
Sediments composed of predominantly quartz are compositionally mature sediment
Sediments containing quartz, feldspar, rock fragments are compositionally immature sediments
Composition of Sandstone
Quartz sandstone: mature
Graywacke sandstone: immature
Decrease of grain size towards the ocean.
Longer transportation distance and higher energy → better compositional and textural maturity.
When clay dries out, it contracts inward, which allows materials to deposit in the cracks.
Tells us rock formed in dry environment
Sand moved by wind, streams, and coastal waves.
Helpful to determine current direction (direction of flow)
Aka cross-stratification
Arrangement of beds or laminations in which one set of layers is inclined relative to others
Formed via wind or water
Direction in which beds slope is an indicator of current direction
Cross-Bedding in a Delta
The succession of inclined forest beds is deposited over bottom-set beds that laid down earlier.
Top-set beds are deposited by the stream above the forest beds
Graded Bedding
Results when flowing water sorts particles by size
Clay settles last
Lithofacies: A facies is part of a rock body that has characteristics from which we can infer depositional environment
Litho → lithological (means stone or rock)
Bio → fossil assemblage
Sedimentation during a transgression event produces an on-lap relationship in which finer offshore lithofacies overlie nearshore facies.
Nearshore facies are progressively displaced away from a marine point of reference, and older beds are protected from erosion by younger beds.
Dependent on vertical change
Effects of rising or falling sea level on different coasts
Contents of a geologic map
Basic topographic features
Rock units: Group, Formation, Member
Time constraints: Cambrian, Silurian, etc.
Strikes, Dips, Faults, and Folds
Scale and legends
Cross section
Topographic profile
Extension of layers towards subsurface