Dictionary Definition
sedimentary adj : resembling or containing or
formed by the accumulation of sediment; "sedimentary
deposits"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Latin sedere, to sit.Adjective
sedimentarySee also
Extensive Definition
Sedimentary rock is one of the three main
rock
groups (the others being igneous and
metamorphic
rock). Rock formed from sediments covers 75-80% of the
Earth's land area, and includes common types such as chalk, limestone, dolomite, sandstone, conglomerate
and shale.
Sedimentary rocks are classified by the source of
their sediments, and are produced by one or more of:
- clastic rock
formed from fragments broken off from parent rock, by
- weathering in situ or
- erosion by water, ice or wind, followed by transportation of sediments, often in suspension, to the place of deposition;
- biogenic activity; or
- precipitation from solution.
The sediments are then compacted
and converted to rock by the process of lithification.
Formation
Sedimentary rocks are
formed because of the overburden
pressure as particles of sediment are deposited out of air, ice,
wind, gravity, or water flows carrying the particles in suspension.
As sediment deposition builds up, the overburden (or 'lithostatic')
pressure squeezes the sediment into layered solids in a process
known as lithification ('rock
formation') and the original connate
fluids are expelled. The term diagenesis is used to
describe all the chemical, physical, and biological changes,
including cementation, undergone by a
sediment after its initial deposition and during and after its
lithification, exclusive of surface weathering.
Sedimentary rocks are laid down in layers called
beds or strata. That new rock layers are above older rock layers is
stated in the principle
of superposition.There are usually some gaps in the sequence
called unconformities. These
represent periods in which no new sediments were being laid down,
or when earlier sedimentary layers were raised above sea level and
eroded away.
Sedimentary rocks contain important information
about the history of
Earth. They contain fossils, the preserved remains of
ancient plants and
animals. Coal is
considered a type of sedimentary rock. The composition of sediments
provides us with clues as to the original rock. Differences between
successive layers indicate changes to the environment which have
occurred over time. Sedimentary rocks can contain fossils because,
unlike most igneous and metamorphic rocks, they form at
temperatures and pressures that do not destroy fossil
remains.
The sedimentary rock cover of the continents of
the Earth's crust is
extensive, but the total contribution of sedimentary rocks is
estimated to be only 5% of the total. As such, the sedimentary
sequences we see represent only a thin veneer over a crust
consisting mainly of igneous and metamorphic rocks.
Classification
Sedimentary rocks are classified into three
groups. These groups are clastic, chemical precipitate and
biochemical or biogenic.
Clastic
Clastic sedimentary rocks are composed of discrete fragments or clasts of materials derived from other rocks. They are composed largely of quartz with other common minerals including feldspar, amphiboles, clay minerals, and sometimes more exotic igneous and metamorphic minerals.Clastic sedimentary rocks, such as breccia or
sandstone, were formed from rocks that have been broken down into
fragments by weathering, which then have been transported and
deposited elsewhere.
Clastic
sedimentary rocks may be regarded as falling along a scale of
grain
size, with shale being
the finest with particles less than 0.002 mm, siltstone being a little
bigger with particles between 0.002 to 0.063 mm, and
sandstone being
coarser still with grains 0.063 to 2 mm, and conglomerates
and breccias being more
coarse with grains 2 to 263 mm. Breccia has sharper
particles, while conglomerate is categorized by its rounded
particles. Particles bigger than 263 mm are termed blocks
(angular) or boulders (rounded). Lutite, Arenite and
Rudite are
general terms for sedimentary rock with clay/silt-, sand- or
conglomerate/breccia-sized particles.
The classification of clastic sedimentary rocks
is complex because there are many variables involved. Particle size
(both the average size and range of sizes of the particles),
composition of the particles, the cement, and the matrix (the name
given to the smaller particles present in the spaces between larger
grains) must all be taken into consideration.
Shales, which consist mostly of clay minerals,
are generally further classified on the basis of composition and
bedding.
Coarser clastic sedimentary rocks are classified
according to their particle size and composition. Orthoquartzite is
a very pure quartz sandstone; arkose is a sandstone with quartz
and abundant feldspar; greywacke is a sandstone with
quartz, clay, feldspar, and metamorphic rock fragments present,
which was formed from the sediments carried by turbidity
currents.
Mechanical weathering is the breakdown of rock
into particles without producing changes in the chemical
composition of the minerals in the rock. Ice is the most important
agent of mechanical weathering. Water percolates into cracks and
fissures within the rock, freezes, and expands. The force exerted
by the expansion is sufficient to widen cracks and break off pieces
of rock. Heating and cooling of the rock, and the resulting
expansion and contraction, also aids the process. Mechanical
weathering contributes further to the breakdown of rock by
increasing the surface area exposed to chemical agents.
Chemical weathering is the breakdown of rock by
chemical reaction. In this process the minerals within the rock are
changed into particles that can be easily carried away. Air and
water are both involved in many complex chemical reactions. The
minerals in igneous rocks may be unstable under normal atmospheric
conditions, those formed at higher temperatures being more readily
attacked than those which formed at lower temperatures. Igneous
rocks are commonly attacked by water, particularly acid or alkaline
solutions, and all of the common igneous rock forming minerals
(with the exception of quartz which is very resistant) are changed
in this way into clay minerals and chemicals in solution.
Rock particles in the form of clay, silt, sand,
and gravel, are transported by the agents of erosion (usually
water, and less frequently by ice and wind) to new locations and
redeposited in layers, generally at a lower elevation.
These agents reduce the size of the particles,
sort them by size, and then deposit them in new locations. The
sediments dropped by streams and rivers form alluvial fans, flood
plains, deltas, and on the bottom of lakes and the sea floor. The
wind may move large amounts of sand and other smaller particles.
Glaciers transport and deposit great quantities of usually unsorted
rock material as till.
These deposited particles eventually become
compacted and cemented together, forming clastic sedimentary rocks.
Such rocks contain inert minerals which are resistant to mechanical
and chemical breakdown such as quartz, zircon, rutile, and magnetite. Quartz is one of
the most mechanically and chemically resistant minerals.
Organic
Organic sedimentary rocks contain materials generated by living organisms, and include carbonate minerals created by organisms, such as corals, mollusks, and foraminifera, which cover the ocean floor with layers of calcite which can later form limestone. Other examples include stromatolites, the flint nodules found in chalk (which is itself a biochemical sedimentary rock, a form of limestone), and coal and oil shale (derived from the remains of tropical plants and subjected to pressure).Chemical
Chemical sedimentary rocks form when mineral solutions, such as sea water, evaporate. Examples include the evaporite minerals halite (rock salt) and gypsum.Economic and scientific relevance
Sedimentary rocks are economically important in
that they can easily be used as construction material because they
are soft and easy to cut. For example, the White House in
Washington DC is made of sandstone. In addition, sedimentary rocks
often form porous and
permeable
reservoirs in sedimentary
basins in which petroleum and other hydrocarbons can be found
(see Bituminous
rocks).
It is believed that the relatively low levels of
carbon
dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere,
in comparison to that of Venus, is
because of large amounts of carbon being trapped in limestone and
dolomite sedimentary
layers. The flux of carbon from eroded sediments to marine deposits
is part of the carbon
cycle.
The shape of the particles in sedimentary rocks
has an important effect on the ability of micro-organisms
to colonize them. This interaction is studied in the science of
geomicrobiology.
One measure of the shape of these particles is the roundness
factor, also known as the Krumbein number after the geologist
W. C.
Krumbein.
See also
Footnotes
References
- Blatt, Harvey and Robert James Tracy, 1994, Petrology: Igneous, Sedimentary and Metamorphic, Freeman, 2nd Ed. ISBN 0-7167-2438-3
- Folk, R.L., 1965, Petrology of sedimentary rocks PDF version. Austin: Hemphill’s Bookstore. 2nd ed. 1981, ISBN 0-914696-14-9
- Basic Sedimentary Rock Classification
sedimentary in Arabic: صخر رسوبي
sedimentary in Belarusian: Асадкавыя горныя
пароды
sedimentary in Bosnian: Sedimentne stijene
sedimentary in Catalan: Roca sedimentària
sedimentary in Czech: Sedimentární hornina
sedimentary in German: Sedimente und
Sedimentgesteine
sedimentary in Estonian: Settekivim
sedimentary in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ιζηματογενές πέτρωμα
sedimentary in Spanish: Roca sedimentaria
sedimentary in Esperanto: Sedimentaj
petroj
sedimentary in Basque: Arroka sedimentario
sedimentary in French: Roche sédimentaire
sedimentary in Galician: Rocha
sedimentaria
sedimentary in Korean: 퇴적암
sedimentary in Croatian: Sedimentne
stijene
sedimentary in Indonesian: Batuan sedimen
sedimentary in Icelandic: Setberg
sedimentary in Italian: Roccia
sedimentaria
sedimentary in Hebrew: סלע משקע
sedimentary in Hungarian: Üledékes kőzetek
sedimentary in Malay (macrolanguage): Batuan
enapan
sedimentary in Mongolian: Тунамал чулуулаг
sedimentary in Dutch: Sedimentair
gesteente
sedimentary in Japanese: 堆積岩
sedimentary in Norwegian: Sedimentær
bergart
sedimentary in Norwegian Nynorsk: Sedimentær
bergart
sedimentary in Low German: Sedimentit
sedimentary in Polish: Skały osadowe
sedimentary in Portuguese: Rocha
sedimentar
sedimentary in Romanian: Roci sedimentare
sedimentary in Russian: Осадочные горные
породы
sedimentary in Simple English: Sedimentary
rock
sedimentary in Slovak: Usadená hornina
sedimentary in Slovenian: Sedimentne
kamnine
sedimentary in Serbian: Седиментне стене
sedimentary in Serbo-Croatian: Sedimentne
stene
sedimentary in Finnish: Sedimenttikivilaji
sedimentary in Swedish: Sedimentär bergart
sedimentary in Tamil: படிவுப் பாறை
sedimentary in Thai: หินตะกอน
sedimentary in Vietnamese: Đá trầm tích
sedimentary in Turkish: Tortul kayaçlar
sedimentary in Ukrainian: Осадова гірська
порода
sedimentary in Chinese: 沉积岩