weathering and erosion formation of sedimentary rocks

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Weathering – the physical breakdown (disintegration) and chemical alteration (decomposition) of rock at or near Earth’s surface Erosion – the physical removal of material by agents such as water, wind, ice, or gravity Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

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Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks. Weathering – the physical breakdown ( disintegration ) and chemical alteration ( decomposition ) of rock at or near Earth’s surface Erosion – the physical removal of material by agents such as water, wind, ice, or gravity. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

• Weathering – the physical breakdown (disintegration) and chemical alteration (decomposition) of rock at or near Earth’s surface

• Erosion – the physical removal of material by agents such as water, wind, ice, or gravity

Weathering and ErosionFormation of Sedimentary Rocks

Page 2: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Sediment: weathered material derived from pre-existing rocks

Sedimentary rock: consolidated sediment (compacted, cemented) plus fossils

Page 3: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Clastic sediments seen during fieldtrip

Page 4: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Clastic sedimentary rocks seen during fieldtrip

Page 5: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

insoluable

Page 6: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

basalt(Mg,Fe)2SiO4 (Mg,Fe)SiO3 pyroxine

H4SiO4 in solution

Mg2+ in solution

Fe (III) hydroxide (insoluble, rust)

CaAl2Si2O8 Ca-feldspar and NaAlSi3O8 Na-Feldspar

Ca+2 in solution

Na+1 in solution

Al2Si2O5(OH)4 (insoluble, “clay”)

Page 7: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

graniteSiO2 quartz

SiO2 (insoluble, “sand”)

CaAl2Si2O8 Ca-feldspar; NaAlSi3O8 Na-Feldspar KAlSi3O8 K-Feldspar

Ca+2 , Na+1, K+1 in solution

Al2Si2O5(OH)4 (insoluble, “clay”)

(Ca,Na)2(Mg,Fe,Al)5(Al,Si)8O22(OH)2 amphibole (and also mica)

Mg+2, Ca+2 , Na+1 in solution

Al2Si2O5(OH)4 (insoluble, “clay”)

Fe (III) hydroxide (insoluble, rust)

Page 8: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

in quartz sand

River sediments are consistent with the composition of the continental crust

in clay

in rust

Page 9: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Effect of surface area

on weathering

Page 10: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Climateand

Weathering

Page 11: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Hot and wet favors chemical

weathering

Page 12: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Cold and snowy favors

mechanial weathering

Page 13: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Why erosion is important

• Life in the sea depends on it to supply critical nutrients.

• It is responsible for the salt content of the sea.

• It is the source of the basic materials to form sedimentary rocks.

• It continually reduces and shapes the surface of the land.

Page 14: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Sea water

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Where’s the Cl come from?

Why no silica?

Page 15: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Mechanisms of Erosion

Page 16: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Mass Wasting

The often catastrophic (geologically rapid)

movement of material on the Earth’s surface is

referred to as mass wasting.

Such features constitute the most widespread of the natural geological

hazards.

the Slumgullion earthflow/landslide, Hinsdale County, CO

Page 17: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

It began high in the mountains as an

earthquake-induced avalanche of snow

and ice, but picked up glacial sediment on

its way.

It hit the towns of Yungay and

Ranrahirca, 18 km away, at around 150

km/hr. The former town was completely

buried.

An astounding 66,000 people were

estimated dead as a result of this massive

debris avalanche.

Nevado Huascaran, Peru, Nevado Huascaran, Peru, 19701970

Page 18: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Mudslides: Costa Rica, June, 2000

The June 27 slide killed 10. Six were killed in the same place in 1993 mudslides.

Page 19: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

landslides

This is a typical landslide.

Note that materials hold

together in more-or-less

singular blocks.

As is common, when the slide

blocks reach a lower slope,

they break up (becoming a

debris flow in this case).

The La Conchita landslide, near Santa Barbara, CA, Spring, 1995.

Page 20: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

(mechanical) weatheringGlaciers

Page 21: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Freezing action

Page 22: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Freezing action

Page 23: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Frost wedging

Page 24: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Joint-controlled weathering

Page 25: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Roots (mechanical) weathering

Page 26: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Root Wedging

Page 27: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Chemical Weathering

Page 28: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Chemical Weathering

Page 29: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Differential Weathering and Erosion

creates topography

Slowly weathered and eroded - high

(Morningside Heights, Palisades, Ramapo Mountains)

Quickly weathered and eroded - low

(sediments beneath Hudson River and west of Palisades)

Page 30: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Differential Weathering

Page 31: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Differential Weathering

Page 32: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Differential Weathering

Page 33: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Differential Weathering

Page 34: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Differential Weathering

Page 35: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Resistant cap rock

Page 36: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Clastic Sediments

from “clast” … little piece

Can be associated with

rivers, glaciers, wind

Page 37: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks
Page 38: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Clastic Sediments and Clastic Sedimentary Rocks

A. Sediments

B. Sedimentary Rocks

Page 39: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Energy and Depositional Environment

Page 40: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Coarse-Grained Sediments

Breccias Conglomerates

Page 41: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Tillite

Brian J. Skinner

Page 42: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Worldwide sediment yield of major drainage basins

Page 43: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Where erosion occurs

…elevationa factor

…highermore

erosion

Page 44: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Meaning of rate100 tons per sq km per year

100 tons

Rock density about 2.5 tons per cubic meter

so 100 tons is about 40 cubic meters (a cube 3.4 m on edge)

1 sq km is 1,000,000 sq meters

Spread 40 cu meters over 1,000,000 sq meters and get a layer 40/1,000,000 = 0.00004 meters = 0.04 millimeters thick

So in 100 years, wear away 4 mm1000 meters

1000 m

Page 45: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Rivers and Sediments

Page 46: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Migrationof meanders

leads tocross-bedding

crossbed from fieldtrip

Page 47: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Deltas

Page 48: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Cross-section of Deltanote that delta grows (progrades) towards sea

Page 49: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Hjulstrom Curve

Page 50: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Hjulstrom Curve

Pebbles and cobbles

Pebbles and cobbles: hard to get moving, an hard to keep moving

Page 51: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Hjulstrom Curve

SandSand: easy to get moving, a fairly easy to keep moving

Page 52: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Hjulstrom Curve

Silt and Clay

Silt and Clay: hard to get moving, but very easy to keep moving

Page 53: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Human Influence

• Human beings move more sediment through mining and building than rivers do.

• Agricultural practices also increase erosion in rivers. Rates thousands of years ago were less than today.

• Empounded water from lakes behind dams also prevent sediment from reaching the sea.

Page 54: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Existence of Lakes

• Largely due to glaciation disrupting drainage networks.

• North American lakes mostly at latitudes greater than 45°, where glaciers were during Pleistocene.

• Will slowly fill up with sediment and disappear

Page 55: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Removal from sea water • Particles settle and are deposited as sediment.

– Sedimentary rocks consisting of fine-grained particles (< .06 mm) are called shale.

– Sedimentary rocks made of medium-grained particles (.06-2 mm) are called sandstone.

– Sedimentary rocks consisting of coarse-grained particles (> 2 mm) are called. conglomerates.

• Calcium and bicarbonate are removed from seawater by organisms to form shells made of CaCO3 (limestone).

• SiO4 is removed from solution by organisms to form silica “ooze” which lithifies to chert (arrowheads).

• Mg++ and SO4-- are removed from ocean water as that water is heated and pumped through mid-oceanic ridges.

• Na+, K+, and Cl- are removed from seawater sporadically in evaporite deposits.

Page 56: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Formation of sedimentary rocksCementation of grains by CaCO3 or SiO2.

• Names of clastic rocks depend on size of grains (big to small). – Conglomerates - tend to be poorly sorted. – Sandstones - often well-sorted. – Shales - made of clay minerals.

• Non-clastic rocks: from dissolved load– Limestones - CaCO3, usually removed from water by a biological

process (e.g. corals and sea-shells). – Evaporites - NaCl and CaSO4 from evaporation of seawater in enclosed

basins (e.g. Utah's Great Salt Lake and the Mid-East's Dead Sea).

Page 57: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Shale Formation

Page 58: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Bioclastic Limestone

Page 59: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Fine-Grained Limestone

Deep sea limestones will not

have visible fossils, because

they are made up of the shells of

little dead bugs like these:

foraminifera.

This specimen

(viewed by scanning electron

microscope) is about

100 microns long

(0.1 millimeter).

Page 60: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Coccoliths – another type of organisms with a CaCO3 test

Page 61: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Chert

Some microorganisms secrete

silica shells.

When these pile up on the deep

ocean floor, they lithify to

become a micro-crystalline

quartz rock called chert (the

same stuff as the substance

flint).

diatoms and radiolaria

Page 62: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Diatoms – organisms with silica tests

Page 63: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Radiolaria – another silica test

Page 64: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Chert arrowhead

Page 65: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Chert beds, now deformed

Near Golden Gate Bridge

Page 66: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Evaporites

Owens Valley, CA

Calcite, halite and gypsum are

common precipitates from

dried lakes in arid

environments.

the white is halite, the red are bacteria that love salt

Page 67: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks

Martin G. Miller

Evaporites in Death Valley

Page 68: Weathering and Erosion Formation of Sedimentary Rocks