Lecture 9 surface processes chemical and physical weathering and sedimentary rocks

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Lecture 9 surface processes chemical and physical weathering and sedimentary rocks

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Lecture 9: Surface Processes: chemical and physical weathering and sedimentary rocks • Questions – What is the rock cycle? How rocks get destroyed and recycled at the surface of the Earth? – At the other end of the transport system, how weathered and eroded materials end up making the various kinds of sedimentary rocks? – What can observations of the sedimentary record reveal about the tectonics, petrology, and climate of both depositional environments and upstream source environments? • Reading – Grotzinger and Jordan, Chapters 5, 16, 18, 19 Weathering and Sedimentation in the Rock Cycle • Our geology so far has focused on internally-driven processes: plate tectonics, magmatism, metamorphism, orogeny • The rest of geology is driven by surface processes: the hydrologic cycle (rainfall, streams, ice), gravity, aqueous chemistry • Weathering and erosion are the processes that form and transport form sediment • Sedimentation, burial and lithification are the processes that transform weathering products into sedimentary rocks Weathering and Sedimentation in the Rock Cycle • A more detailed view of the surface-driven parts of the rock cycle shows the various steps between source rock and sedimentary product Weathering: decomposition of rocks • There is a distinction between weathering and erosion: – Weathering converts exposed rock to soil in place – Erosion transports dissolved or fragmented material from the source area where weathering is occurring to a depositional environment – Most of the earth’s surface is covered by exposure of sediment or sedimentary rock, by area – But the sediment layer is thin in most places, with respect to overall crustal thickness, so sedimentary rock is a minor volume fraction of the crust (in part by definition: once buried to the mid-crust, sediments get cooked to metasediments) Weathering: chemical and physical • The destruction of rocks at the Earth’s surface by weathering has two fundamental modes of operation: – Chemical weathering is dissolution or alteration of the original minerals, usually by reactions with aqueous solutions • Chemical weathering puts ions from the source minerals into solution for subsequent erosion by transport in flowing water as dissolved load – Physical weathering is fragmentation into progressively smaller particles, from intact outcrop to boulders and on down to mineral fragments and sand grains • Physical weathering makes loose pieces of rock available for downslope movement by mass wasting or transport in flowing water as suspended or bed load Chemical Weathering • Chemical weathering is driven by thermodynamic energy minimization, just like chemical reactions at high temperature – The system seeks the most stable assemblage of phases – The differences are that (1) kinetics are slow and metastability is common; (2) the stable minerals under wet, ambient conditions are different from those at high T and P; (3) solubility in water and its dependence on water chemistry (notably pH) are major determinants in the stability of minerals in weathering • • A fresh rock made of olivine and pyroxenes will end up as clays and iron oxides, with other elements in solution A fresh rock made of feldspars and quartz will end up as clays, hydroxides, and quartz in most waters Chemical Weathering Chemical Weathering • The most common alteration product of feldspars is kaolinite, Al2Si2O5(OH)4, which serves as a model for the formation of clays by weathering generally – The reactions of feldspars to kaolinite illustrate some of the basic trends: • • • • K, Na, Ca are highly soluble and readily leached by chemical weathering Excess Si can be removed as silicic acid although quartz is relatively insoluble Al is extremely insoluble, and is essentially conserved as source rock is converted to clays Weathering is a hydration process, leaving H2O bound in the altered minerals – KAlSi3O8 + H2O + H+ -> Al2Si2O5(OH)4 + K+ + H4SiO4 • Note the H+ on the left-hand side…only acidic water can drive this reaction • Natural waters are acidic due to equilibrium of carbonic acid with CO2 in the atmosphere – CO2 (g) + H2O = H2CO3 – KAlSi3O8 + H2O + H2CO3 -> Al2Si2O5(OH)4 + K+ + H4SiO4 + 2HCO3– – Alteration of rock transforms acidic rainwater into neutral surface or ground water, with bicarbonate the dominant species (relative to CO2 and CO32–) – Mg and Fe2+ are also readily leached, but Fe3+ is very insoluble…the ultimate residue of alteration of mafic rocks is hematite Chemical Weathering Knowing the chemistry of reaction of minerals to kaolinite, it is possible to reconstruct from the dissolved ions in stream water the amount of each source mineral that reacted with the water • • Questions: How you the correction for atmospheric input? Do the source minerals in the Sierra Nevada all weather at equal rates? Chemical Weathering • Some minerals are congruently soluble in acidic water, leaving no residue – The most abundant is calcite: CaCO3 + H2CO3 = Ca2+ + 2HCO3– (the Tums reaction) – Effects of dissolution (and precipitation) of calcite can be dramatic, to say the least Sinkhole Karst terrain Speleothems 10 Tour of sedimentary environments Let us go through each of the major categories of sedimentary environment, keeping in mind the relationship between observable processes in modern settings and the preserved features in ancient examples, and the ways in which observation of a sedimentary rock formation can be used to infer the type of setting and detailed information about it 31 Sedimentary environments: Terrestrial I Fluvial (rivers and streams of all kinds and sizes) a Alluvial Fans We saw alluvial fans on the field trip They form where drainages exit mountain fronts onto surrounding lowlands Individual fans may merge to form a piedmont slope (like Pasadena) In arid regions like California, sediment transport on alluvial fans is dominated by debris flows like mudslides and landslides, and by periodic stream flows that divide the fan into channel and overbank deposits Sorting is poor, but increases downstream; grain size decreases downstream; sediments are often oxidized and poor in fossils or organic matter 32 Sedimentary environments: Terrestrial I Fluvial b River systems Rivers are classified into meandering or braided, most often Braiding is favored by high sediment load, steep gradients, variable stream flow, and unstable poorly vegetated banks Meandering is favored by the opposite 33 Sedimentary environments: Terrestrial I Fluvial b River systems Meandering rivers develop in a fairly regular pattern by channel migration, leaving a predictable sequence of cyclic, fining-upward sedimentary deposits Braided river deposits are more chaotic leave somewhat random deposits, since channels wander randomly across the floodplain 34 Sedimentary environments: Terrestrial • II Desert environment • Deserts basins are basically alluvial fans, playas, and sand dunes They may be dominated by wind transport or by fluvial transport restricted to rare, seasonal storms and floods • Alluvial fans are debris flow and stream flow deposits (as above) • Playas are dry or seasonal lake beds dominated by evaporites or fine-grained and finely laminated mudstones and siltstones • Sand dunes leave fascinating cross-bedded to massive sandstone deposits • Sustained deposition of wind-blown dust makes thick deposits of loess 35 Sedimentary environments: Terrestrial • III Lacustrine (i.e., lakes) • Lakes are special, compared to rivers and oceans, in several ways: – Small size (no large waves), absence of tides, and low currents makes lakes very low-energy sedimentary environments Coarse sediments are limited to their margins – Lakes generally keep all sediment that arrives from a large drainage area, so sedimentation rates are high, often ten times higher than marine settings – Open lakes (with inlet and outlet streams) are usually fresh-water and generate only clastic sediments Closed basin lakes become saline and lead to chemicaldominated sedimentation Many lake deposits show cyclic alternations between closed and open conditions Annual variations in sediment supply (especially if the lake freezes over each winter) are often preserved in low-energy lacustrine depositional environments as countable annual layers or varves Varves 36 Sedimentary environments: Terrestrial • IV Glacial and peri-glacial • We saw some of the typical valley glacier deposits on the field trip But there is more to the glacial environment than moraines and tills – Glaciers generate characteristic river deposits (frequently braided) and lake deposits (frequently varved) when they terminate on land, and characteristic marine deposits when they terminate in the ocean (dropstones) They move large boulders, but they also generate huge amounts of very fine rock flour that ends up as mud or loess Periglacial deposits, like most sedimentary sequences, have several facies: a basal till deposited in front of the glacier is overlain by moraines, lake sediments, glacio-fluvial deposits, and finally loess 37 Sedimentary environments: Marginal Marine • I Deltaic environment: Deltas form wherever rivers empty into oceans or lakes Much of the clastic load carried to the mouth of the river is deposited in a restricted area at or near the coast, forming a delta – Because deltas prograde outwards, they build deposits with reverse grading, coarsening upwards as the delta moves past a given location – The forces affecting sedimentation in a delta are fluvial, tidal, and waves, and different deltas display effects of dominance by different forces The Mississippi delta is fluvial-dominated: Both tides and waves are weak in the Gulf of Mexico, so distribution of sediment is dominated by the river itself, which forms long, relatively stable channels (life span ~1000 years) with levees; each channel narrows upwards until it pinches off 38 Sedimentary environments: Marginal Marine • • I Deltaic environment Flow at the mouth of a fluvial-dominated delta is controlled by the relative density of river outflow and ambient sea-water Depending on river sediment load and temperature (and on ocean salinity and temperature), the flow may be hyperpycnal (river outflow denser), or hypopycnal (river outflow less dense) – Hyperpycnal flow leads to turbidite deposits from sediment-rich flows along the bottom Hypopycnal flow leads to uniform, well-sorted sediments since in this case settling is controlled by flocculation of fine particles 39 Sedimentary environments: Marginal Marine • The Ganges-Brahmaputra delta is tide-dominated – Although the river outflow is higher and more sedimentladen than the Mississippi, the tidal range is large (about meters) This type of delta breaks up into sand bars and channels oriented parallel to the tidal inflow-outflow direction There is a large, intermittently exposed, tidal flat • The Sao Francisco river in Brazil is wave-dominated – Wave-energy here is 100 times that at the Mississippi Sediments reaching the mouth of the river are rapidly reworked and redistributed by longshore currents to build beaches, barriers, and lagoons, similar to stretches of coast where no river is present 40 Sedimentary environments: Marginal Marine II Beach-barrier environment Any continental margin where there is not a river mouth is likely to form a beach with a single shoreface or a beachbarrier island-lagoon system • A beach produces a distinctively ordered set of recognizable facies, from dune sands through the surf zone, breaker zone and into deeper water • A barrier complex has a lagoon and often a swamp deposit behind the barrier 41 Sedimentary environments: Marginal Marine II Beach-barrier environment If a simple beach is prograding, i.e building out to sea and depositing near-shore facies on top of distal facies, it might produce a stratigraphic column like this, coarsening upwards and hence clearly distinct from any river floodplain or continental slope deposit Keep in mind the relationship between the lateral succession of environments at any constant time across a beach and the vertical succession of sediments shown in a column like this one 42 Sedimentary environments: Marginal Marine III Estuarine environment • An estuary is a partly enclosed body of water at the mouth of a river It may be part of a delta; it may be the lagoon behind a barrier-island Generally, estuaries must have a connection to the open ocean at least at high tide They are environments of mixing between seawater and freshwater Example: San Francisco Bay IV Tidal flats • A wide, flat area of land between low-tide level and high-tide level is a tidal flat These are common environments for deposition of carbonates and evaporites They may be associated with deltas, beaches, or estuaries 43 Sedimentary environments: Marine I Neritic environments • This term refers to depths below wave-base and low tide, and above the shelf-slope break – At times of sea level highstand, when shallow seas cover the continental platforms, the neritic environment may encompass a significant fraction of the earth’s area – The neritic environment is where carbonate reefs are built 44 II Oceanic environments Sedimentary environments: Marine • Continental slope deposits are characterized by turbidites, cyclic finingupward sedimentary sequences that form by turbidity flows of suspended sediment down the moderately steep slopes of the continental slope • Deep sea (abyssal) deposits There is a clear regional pattern with areas dominated by chemical sediment (carbonate ooze or siliceous ooze) or by a very slow accumulation of fine clastic particles (pelagic clay) We will develop the ocean chemistry and geology to understand this pattern 45

Ngày đăng: 30/11/2016, 18:07

Mục lục

  • Lecture 9: Surface Processes: chemical and physical weathering and sedimentary rocks

  • Weathering and Sedimentation in the Rock Cycle

  • Slide 3

  • Weathering: decomposition of rocks

  • Weathering: chemical and physical

  • Chemical Weathering

  • Slide 7

  • Slide 8

  • Slide 9

  • Slide 10

  • Rates of Chemical Weathering

  • Physical Weathering

  • Weathering feedbacks: chemical and physical

  • Weathering feedbacks: more generally

  • Soil formation

  • Slide 16

  • Erosion and Transport

  • Slide 18

  • Slide 19

  • Sedimentation

  • Slide 21

  • Diagenesis

  • Sedimentary Rocks

  • Slide 24

  • Sedimentary rocks and environmental information

  • Sedimentary structure

  • Sedimentary Structure

  • Slide 28

  • Slide 29

  • Carbonate Rocks

  • Tour of sedimentary environments

  • Sedimentary environments: Terrestrial

  • Slide 33

  • Slide 34

  • Slide 35

  • Slide 36

  • Slide 37

  • Sedimentary environments: Marginal Marine

  • Slide 39

  • Slide 40

  • Slide 41

  • Slide 42

  • Slide 43

  • Sedimentary environments: Marine

  • Slide 45

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