Combine Sedimentary PDF-2
Combine Sedimentary PDF-2
Combine Sedimentary PDF-2
(UMaT), TARKWA
Faculty of Mineral Resources Technology
Department of Geological Engineering
GL 275 – SEDIMENTARY
PETROLOGY
Lecturer:
Emmanuel Daanoba SUNKARI
Organisational Aspects
Department: Geological Engineering
Email: [email protected]
Office hours: Wednesdays and Thursdays between 9-16hrs
Assessment
Class attendance (10 marks)
Continuous Assessment: Assignments + Exercise + Mini Projects/Lab
Work (30 marks)
End of semester exams (60 marks)
NB: Marks will be allocated for class participation
AREAS TO COVER
Introduction
Formation of Sedimentary Rocks
Siliciclastic Textures
Classification of Sedimentary Rocks
Stability of Minerals
Interpretation of some Sedimentary Structures and Textures
Sedimentary Environments
Deformational Structures and Mechanisms of Formation
Diagenesis
Sedimentary Rocks and Plate Boundaries
What is Sedimentary Petrology?
This is the study of sedimentary rocks and the
processes that resulted in their formation, i.e.
weathering, erosion, transportation, deposition, and
diagenesis.
Limestone
Limestone Dolomite
Discontinuous limestone layers from central Turkey Massive limestone layers from central Turkey
Iron-rich mudrocks
A: Pyritic mudrocks: pyritic nodules and laminae, often in black or bituminous shales,
usually marine
B: Sideritic mudrocks: mostly nodules in organic-rich mudrocks; often non-marine.
Flute casts
Flute casts are readily identifiable from their shape.
In plan, on the bedding undersurface, they are elongated to
triangular (‘heel-shaped’) with a pointed upstream end.
In section they are asymmetric,
Flute marks vary in length from several to tens of
centimeters.
Flutes form through erosion of a muddy sediment surface
by eddies in a passing turbulent current and then the marks
are filled with sediment as the flow decelerates.
Flute marks are reliable indicators of paleocurrent
direction; their orientation should be measured
Groove casts
Groove casts are elongated ridges on bed undersurfaces,
ranging in width from a few millimetres to several tens of
centimetres.
They may fade out laterally, after several meters, or persist
across the exposure.
Groove casts on a bed undersurface may be parallel to each
other or they may show a variation in trend, up to several tens of
degrees or more.
Groove casts form through the filling of grooves, cut chiefly by
objects (lumps of mud or wood, etc.) dragged along by a current.
Groove casts are common on the undersurfaces of turbidites.
Groove/gutter casts indicate the trend of the current and
their orientation.
Tool marks
These form when objects being carried by a current come into
contact with the sediment surface.
The marks are referred to as prod, roll, brush, bounce and skip
marks, as appropriate, or simply as tool marks.
An impression left by an object may be repeated several times,
if it was saltating (gliding/sliding along the bed).
Objects making the marks are commonly mud clasts, pebbles,
fossils and plant debris.
Once made, the impression of a tool may be eroded and
elongated parallel to the current direction.
As with flutes and grooves, casts are formed when sediment
fills the tool mark and so they are usually seen on the soles of
sandstone and limestone beds.
Scour marks and scoured surfaces
These are structures formed by current erosion.
The term scour mark would be used for a small-scale
erosional structure, generally less than a meter across,
cutting down several centimetres, and occurring on the base
of or within a bed.
In plan, they are usually elongate in the current direction.
With increasing size, scours grade into channels.
The scoured surfaces are usually sharp and irregular with
some relief, but they can be smooth.
Sole Marks - Load Casts
Bulbous protrusions of denser sand into less dense
mud layers.
Limestone
Limestone Dolomite
Discontinuous limestone layers from central Turkey Massive limestone layers from central Turkey
Iron-rich mudrocks
A: Pyritic mudrocks: pyritic nodules and laminae, often in black or bituminous shales,
usually marine
B: Sideritic mudrocks: mostly nodules in organic-rich mudrocks; often non-marine.
Some well known deltas include the Niger River delta and
the Nile River delta.
Modern delta
Delta deposits
Deltas can be good environments for the formation and
accumulation of oil and gas.
Nutrient-rich river flowing into the oceans causes large offshore
algal booms.
The organic matter eventually falls to the sea bottom forming an
organic mud that is preserved as black shale in front of the delta.
Sediments cover the black shale source rock as the delta is
deposited out into the ocean.
The overlying delta sediments contain beach, and river channel
sandstone reservoir rocks.
As the loose shale compacts, the delta on surface subsides and is
covered with marsh, swamp and river deposits.
The oil and gas forms in the underlying source rocks and migrates
up into the sandstone reservoir rocks.
Beach, Barrier Island, Dune: a Barrier Island is an elongate sand
bar built by wave action. All are comprised of well-sorted quartz
sandstones with rounded grains.
Beach and Barrier Island: low angle cross-bedding and
marine fossils.
Dune: high-angle and low-angle cross-bedding and occasional
fossil footprints.
All 3 environments can also contain carbonate sand in tropical
areas producing cross-bedded clastic limestone.
Beaches and barrier islands
Shoreline deposits are exposed to wave energy and
dominated by sand with a marine fauna.
Beach
Lagoons
Are bodies of water on the landward side of barrier
islands.
http://novella.mhhe.com/sites/0072402466/student_view0/chapter6/matching_quiz.html
Plate Tectonics:
Earth's Plates and Continental
Drift
By
Emmanuel Daanoba SUNKARI
Email: [email protected]
• Some questions we will answer today:
Mantle
Outer Core
Inner Core
crust - the rigid, rocky outer surface of the Earth, composed mostly of basalt
and granite. The crust is thinner under the oceans.
mantle - a rocky layer located under the crust - it is composed of silicon,
oxygen, magnesium, iron, aluminum, and calcium. Convection (heat) currents
carry heat from the hot inner mantle to the cooler outer mantle.
outer core - the molten iron-nickel layer that surrounds the inner core.
inner core - the solid iron-nickel center of the Earth that is very hot and under
great pressure.
DID YOU KNOW?
Land and Water
• Photographs of the earth taken from space
show clearly that it is a truly a ”watery
planet.”
• More than 70 percent of the earth’s
surface is covered by water, mainly the
salt water of oceans and seas.
Land
•The large landmasses in the oceans are called
continents.
• Landforms are commonly classified according to
differences in relief. The relief is the difference in
elevation between the highest and lowest points. Another
important characteristic is whether they rise gradually or
steeply.
• The major types of landforms are mountains, hills,
plateaus, and plains.
• Most people know that Earth is moving
around the Sun and that it is constantly
spinning.
• Why is this?
Plate Tectonics
• Most of these changes in the earth’s
surface take place so slowly that they are
not immediately noticeable to the human
eye.
Continental Drift
and
Seafloor Spreading.
Less than 100 years ago, many scientists thought
the continents always had been the same shape
and in the same place.
Depending on which way these plates are moving will decide what is
happening on the earth you and I are standing on.
They’re Pulling Apart!
• When plates pull away from
one another they form a
diverging plate boundary, or
spreading zone.
Thingvellir, the spreading zone in Iceland between the North American (left
side) and Eurasian (right side) tectonic plates. January 2003.
The Crash!
• What happens when plates crash into
each other depends on the types of
plates involved.
– Because continental crust is lighter
than oceanic crust, continental plates
”float” higher.
– Therefore, when an oceanic plate
meets a continetnal plate, it slides
under the lighter plate and down into
the mantle. The slab of oceanic rock
melts when the endges get to a depth
which is hot enough. A temperature
hot enough to melt about a thousand
degrees!. This process is called
subduction. Molten material produced
in a subduction zone can rise to the
earth’s surface and cause volcanic
building, mountains, and islands.
When they Crash
• When two plates of the same type meet,
the result is a process called converging.