Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures -...

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Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock Body & Lateral Extent IV Facies Relationships V Stratigraphic Sequence VI Fossils - Distribution - Preservation

Transcript of Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures -...

Page 1: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Keys to Sedimentary Environments

I Sediment Composition and Texture

II Sedimentary Structures

- Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils)

III Geometry of Rock Body & Lateral Extent

IV Facies Relationships

V Stratigraphic Sequence

VI Fossils

- Distribution - Preservation

Page 2: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

I Open Marine Settings

•Subaqueous•Typically low energy •Typically area of deposition•Clastic or carbonate•Wide extent•Normal salinities•Diverse marine fauna

General Characteristics of Environments

Note that there will be exceptions!

Page 3: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

II Transitional/Marginal Marine Settings

•Subaqueous or subaerial•Typically high energy•Area of deposition (delta) or erosion (beach)•Clastic or carbonate•Limited lateral extent•May have abnormal salinities (high salinity in

arid environments, low salinity in humid)•Limited marine fauna, perhaps terrestrial or freshwater elements as well

General Characteristics of Environments (cont.)

Page 4: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Nonmarine/Continental/Terrestrial Settings

•Typically subaerial•Typically area of erosion•Clastic dominated•Limited lateral extent (eolian an exception)•Typically fresh water, but could be highly saline (playas)•Limited nonmarine fauna

General Characteristics of Environments (cont.)

Page 5: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

I Shallow Sublittoral (Subtidal) - above wave base

•Inner Continental Shelf - Clastic Shelf

- Carbonate Shelf (Platform, Ramp)

Usually at low latitude and lack clastics

•Epeiric/Epicontinental Seas

•Intracontinental Basins

Page 6: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Continental Shelves

•General

- Gentle, < 1o (1:500) slope

- 30m -1300km wide (passive vs active margins)

- Shelf break at ~ 130m depth

- 9% of total ocean area (6% Earth’s surface)

- 2.5 km sediment thickness

- 15% of marine sediment volume

Note that there is an abundance of sand onthe continental shelfs today - why?

Page 7: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Continental Shelves (cont.)

Clastic Inner Shelf (P&S p. 187-188)

- Wave dominated (High energy) - Tide dominated (Lower energy)

•Sediments - quartz sand grading into muds

•Sed struc - wave ripples, trough cross- stratification, hummocky cross-stratification

•Geometry - tabular sheets (wave dom), lenses or ridges (tide dom)

•Assoc envir - Down dip - deeper marine muds - Up dip - deltas and beaches/barriers

•Fossils - abundant (often abraded), vertical burrows

Page 8: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

•General - Largely restricted to tropics and areas of clear water (low clastic and low nutrient input) - Variable energy levels

•Sediment - typically few clastics present, occasional shales, In situ limestones (carbonate mudstone to grainstone) dominate

•Sed struc - intraclasts, ooids and oncoids, hummocky cross-stratification

•Geometry - widespread, tabular sheets

•Assoc envir - Up dip peritidal or sabkah - Down dip deeper marine fine-grained carbonates - Reefs common

•Fossils - abundant, marine, diverse, preservation variable

Carbonate “Shelf” (P&S p. 250)

Page 9: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

•Carbonate Shelf

- Abrupt seaward termination - Sedimentation exceeded sea-level rise - Rimmed or nonrimmed (bypass) - e.g. Florida

•Carbonate Platform

- Abrupt termination - Rimmed or nonrimmed - More extensive than shelf - e.g. Bahamas

•Carbonate Ramp

- Gentle slope - Sedimentation did not exceed sea-level rise - e.g. Yucatan Peninsula, Persian Gulf

Carbonate “Shelf” (cont.)

Page 10: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Peritidal (P&S p. 242)

•Sediments - carbonate muds, evaporites

•Sed struc - mud cracks, tidal channels, birdseye

•Geometry - thin, laterally continuous along strike

•Assoc envir - carbonate shelf, reefs, continental

•Fossils - low diversity, algal stromatolites

Page 11: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Epeiric (Epicontinental) Sea

•Located on top of continents, not at margins

•More common in past than today

•Hudson’s Bay a modern example?

•Thin sequences relative to basins & passive margins (little accommodation space)

•Shallow-water

- High productivity

- Influenced by storms (Hummocky cross-stratification common)

Page 12: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Epeiric (Epicontinental) Sea (cont.)

•Very low gradient (1m/50,000m) (continental shelf is 1:500)

- Greatly influenced by eustasy - Broad facies belts - Frictional Damping

Irwin & Shaw XYZ model (Perhaps hypersaline) (Perhaps stagnant)

•Associated sedimentary rocks

- Typical shallow-water sediments (Frequently low-energy - broad inner, Z zone) - Widespread black shales - Dev. Chatanooga Shale, Jur. Posidonia Schieffer - Evaporites - Perm. Zechstein

Page 13: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Intracratonic Basins

•General - High accommodation (downwarping) - Not due to active tectonism/mountain building (e.g. Foreland Basins), perhaps due to old rifts - Particularly common in Paleozoic of North America - e.g. Permian Oquirrh Basin of Utah

•Sediments - thick accumulations of shallow-water sediment

•Geometry - oval plan shape, saucer-shaped in cross section •Assoc envir - domes (sediments thin across domes), epeiric seas

•Fossils - may be abundant

Page 14: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

II Carbonate Buildups (P&S p. 258-259)

•Sediments - boundstone core, fore reef talus/breccia, back reef wackestones, core often dolomitized

•Geometry - mound or bank like, variable size

•Assoc envir - peritidal/sabkah, lagoon, basin muds

•Fossils - framework builders have varied over time, include corals, stromatoporoids, rudistid bivalves, calcareous algae

Page 15: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

•Massive•Thick deposits•Steep flanks•Abrupt facies changes•Few clastics

What are the geologic characteristics of a reef?

Page 16: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Deep Sublittoral

•General

- Low energy - Typically fine-grained sediments - Low temperature - May exhibit low oxygen levels (particularly

in stratified basins) - Potential for high carbon preservation

•Outer Continental Shelf

•Continental Slope

•Continental Rise

•Abyssal Plain

Page 17: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Deep Sublittoral (cont.)

Outer Continental Shelf

•General

- Lower energy, may still experience storms

- Abundant present day sands are a relict from the last ice age

- May be cut by submarine canyons

•Sediments - clay or carbonate muds

•Assoc envir - shallow shelf, continental slope

•Fossils - preservation may be good (low energy), although sedimentation rates are often low, Cruziana - Zoophycos ichnofacies

Page 18: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Deep Sublittoral (cont.)

Continental Slope (Bathyal) (P&S p. 196-197)

•General

- 2-6o slope

- 140m to 300-800m depth

- 6% of ocean area (4% Earth’s area)

- Cut by submarine canyons

- 9 km sediment thickness

- 41 % of marine sediment volume

Page 19: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Deep Sublittoral (cont.)

Continental Rise (P&S p. 196-197)

•General - 800 - 4,000 m depth

- 6% of ocean area (4% Earth’s area)

- Cut by submarine canyons

- 8 km sediment thickness

- 31 % of marine sediment volume

- Submarine fan systems may contain coarse sediments

- Extremely important hydrocarbon reserves

Page 20: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Deep Sublittoral (cont.)

Continental Slope and Rise (P&S p. 196-197)

•Sediments - hemipelagic muds, channel sands (fans), turbidites, slump and slide deposits

•Geometry - thick wedge or lens shape

•Assoc envir - deep marine, abyssal plain

•Fossils - rare, some broken shells from continental shelf, some forams

Page 21: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Deep Sublittoral (cont.)

Abyssal Plains (and some epicratonic basins) (P&S p. 209)

•General (abyssal plains)

- < 1:1000 slope (very flat)

- 4-6 km depth

- 78% of ocean area (55% Earth’s surface)

- 0.6 km sediment thickness

- 13% of marine sediment volume

- potentially dysaerobic or anaerobic

Page 22: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Deep Sublittoral (cont.)

Abyssal Plains (and some epicratonic basins) (P&S p. 209)

•Typically low sedimentation (1mm/ka)

•Sediments - pelagic, thin bedded, finely laminated calcareous and siliceous oozes and red clays (from deserts)

•Geometry - very widespread, thin sheets

•Assoc envir - sandy turbidite deposits

•Fossils - low macrofossil density, abundant planktonic fossils, surface feeding burrows

Note that oldest seafloor is Jurassic (~150Ma), also abyssalsediments only occasionally exposed at convergent margins

Page 23: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

I Sheltered Shallow Marine

II Beach/Barriers/Spits

III Rocky Shore

IV Tidal Flats/Sabkahs

V Deltas/Fan Deltas

Transitional/Marginal Marine Settings

•Subaqueous or subaerial

•Typically high energy

•Area of deposition (delta) or erosion (beach)

•Clastic or carbonate

•Limited lateral extent

•May have abnormal salinities (high salinity in arid environments, low salinity in humid)

•Limited marine fauna, perhaps terrestrial or freshwater elements as well

Page 24: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Environments

- Lagoons

- Bays

- Estuaries - mixing of fresh and salt water, highly productive

- Salinas - restricted circulation

•General - Low energy

- May mimic deep-water settings - Variable salinities

I Sheltered Shallow Marine

Page 25: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

•Sediments - fine-grained, clay or carbonate muds, coals or carbonaceous (organic rich) sediments, evaporites

•Associated environments - Up dip - beach, continental - Down dip - shallow, open marine, reef, barrier

•Fossils - may have a restricted fauna, preservation usually good

I Sheltered Shallow Marine (cont.)

Page 26: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

II Beaches/Barriers/Spits (P&S p. 175, 181-182)

•General - High energy, dynamic (barriers migrate) - Subaerial dunes to swash to shoreface •Sediments - coarse, well-sorted sediments, mature quartz sands, heavy mineral lags

•Sed struc - eolian dunes, planar bedding (swash zone) symmetrical (wave) and

asymmetrical (current) ripples

Page 27: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

II Beaches/Barriers/Spits (cont.)

•Geometry - tabular, seaward dipping shoreface, barriers may be elongate

•Assoc envir - Laterally deltas

- Up dip lagoon, peritidal, or continental - Down dip - shallow, open marine •Fossils - marine, broken, poor preservation

Page 28: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Rocky Shore

•General - high energy

•Features - Sea cliffs - Wave terraces - Wave cut notches - Sea stacks

•Sediments - coarse conglomerates

•Associated environments - Rocky intertidal zone - Up dip continental - Down dip shallow, open marine

•Fossils - poor preservation, may have rock boring trace fossils

Page 29: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

IV Littoral (Tidal) (P&S p. 171)

•General

- May be high energy

- Energy may vary on daily basis

•Sediments - Cyclically alternating clastic sands and muds

•Sed struc

- Flasers

- Interference ripples

- Herringbone cross-stratification

- Mud cracks

- Rip ups, mud balls

- Algal mats in supratidal

- Possible evaporites (arid Sabkah)

Page 30: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

IV Littoral (Tidal) - cont.

•Geometry - tabular, channels lenticular

•Associated settings

- Up dip continental settings or sabkah

- Down dip shallow, open marine

•Fossils - harsh environment, fauna often limited to a few species, may be

heavily

bioturbated

•May show strong biotic zonation

- Subtidal

- Intertidal

- Supratidal

Page 31: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

V Deltas (P&S p. 164, 168)

•General - Variable energy - High sedimentation rate - Highly productive - Important oil producing area

•Distinct subenvironments - Delta plain - Delta fringe - Prodelta

•Delta types - River dominated - birds foot - Wave dominated - Tide dominated

Page 32: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

•Sediments - muds (prodelta, interdistributary bays) to sands (distributary channels, channel mouth bars), coals

•Sed struc

- Teepee structures - Ball and pillow - Mud diapirs - Growth faults - Distributary channels - Steeply inclined delta foresets

V Deltas (cont.)

Page 33: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

•Geometry - thick wedge, triangular, possible very large

•Assoc envir - fluvial, continental, barrier, deeper marine

•Fossils - mixture of continental and fresh-water fossils (poorly preserved) and marine fossils (well preserved), heavy bioturbation

V Deltas (cont.)

Page 34: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

I Lake/Lacustrine

II Playa

III Swamp/Paludal

IV Fluvial

V (A)eolian

VI Alluvial Fans

VII Mountain

VIII Foreland Basins

IX Glacial

•Typically subaerial

•Typically area of erosion

•Clastic dominated

•Limited lateral extent (eolian an exception)

•Typically fresh water, but could be highly saline (playas)

•Limited nonmarine fauna

Nonmarine/Continental/Terrestrial

Page 35: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

I Lakes (Lacustrine Systems)

•Origins

•Size

•Chemistry

•Life span

•Characteristic features

P&S p. 149

Page 36: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Variable origins

•Faults – graben

•Cenotes (sinkholes)

•Calderas (volcanoes)

•Abandoned channels - oxbow lakes

•Landslide dams

•Glacial - scour - bedrock basins

- deposition - kettle lakes

Page 37: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Lakes -Variable size

•Inland seas

- Caspian 144,000 km2 area

- Lake Baikal 1742 m deep

•Small ponds

Variable Chemistry

•Typically fresh

•May be saline - centripetal drainage(e.g. Great Salt Lake)

•May have high carbonate content (hardness)(e.g. East African Rift Lakes)

Page 38: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Lakes - Geologically ephemeral

•Most only 12-14 ka - since last ice age

•Pleistocene pluvial lakes

- Bonneville – UT

- Lahontan – NV

- Channeled scablands - WA

•Extensive lakes in western US at 50MaGreen River and Fossil Lakes

Page 39: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Lakes (P&S p. 149)

•General - may mimic ocean settings, but usually fresh water

•Sediments - fine grained clay muds (except for shoreline, deltaic), often organic rich, limestones possible, evaporites (playa), ash beds

•Sed struc - varves, mud cracks

•Geometry - limited area to widespread, circular or elongate in map view, lenticular cross section, individual beds are thin, tabular

•Assoc envir - continental, fluvial, beach, deltaic, swamp, marsh

•Fossils - well preserved, nonmarine, snails, clams, ostracods, fish, possibly stromatolites

Page 40: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

II Playas

•Indicates arid environment

•Centripedal drainage

•Evaporite minerals

Page 41: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

III Paludal (Swamp)

•General - Low energy - High productivity

•Sediments - coals common, clay muds

•Sed struc - root casts

•Assoc envir - fluvial, possibly shallow marine systems

• Fossils - well-preserved plants common

Page 42: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

IV Fluvial Systems

Produced by precipitation, powered by gravity.

Major shaper of the Earth’s surface.

•Parts of a stream

•Profile

•Stream types

•Stream landforms

•Characteristics

Page 43: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Parts of a stream

•Channel •Levees•Flood plain•Headwaters (origin)•Mouth (terminus)

Page 44: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Stream Profile

•Channel shape•Gradient•Tributaries •Discharge•Velocity•Load

Page 45: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Stream Types

•“Slope wash” (large area)

•Arroyos

•Headwaters/ Mountain (High gradient)

•Braided (Low gradient, high sed load)

•Meandering (Low gradient)

Page 46: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Stream Landforms

•Erosion

- Channels - Cut banks

•Deposition

- Terraces - Levees - Flood plains

- Point bars - Alluvial fans - Deltas

Page 47: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Braided Stream (P&S p. 136)

•General - near source at change in gradient

•Sediments - gravel near fans, sandy more distal, few fines

•Sed struc - channel lag gravels, sandy trough cross- stratification

•Geometry - sheet sands, or elongate lenticular

•Assoc envir - alluvial fan, alluvial plain

•Fossils - few or no

Page 48: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Meandering Stream (P&S p. 144)

•General - Low gradient - Much more fine-grained material than braided stream

•Sediments - channel lag gravels, sandy channels, floodplain silts and muds

•Sed struc - plane beds, trough cross-stratification, ripples in pointbars; mudcracks, rain drop impressions, climbing ripples on floodplain

•Geometry - long, ribbon-like “shoestring” sands within shales

•Assoc envir - lakes, deltas, floodplains

•Fossils - wood, bone, freshwater molluscs

Page 49: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

V (A)Eolian Deposits

Named after Greek god of wind – Aeolus

P&S p. 153-154

•General - Most important in arid regions (< 250mm or 10" per year ppt) - Require wind, sediment supply, lack of plants

•Sediments - deposits are well sorted, fine grained (sand or silt), sands may be frosted

•Sed struc - Pavements and ventifacts, dunes with high angle cross-strata and thick bed sets (cross-strata orientation often variable)

•Geometry - Widespread, thick, tabular

•Assoc envir - interdune facies may include playas

•Fossils - rare footprints and root casts

Page 50: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

VI Alluvial Fan P&S p. 134

•General - Associated with uplift - Fluvial and mass wasting processes dominate - Fan deltas empty directly into lakes or oceans

•Sediments - Immature (poorly sorted and angular) sands, coarse sieve deposits (orthoconglomerates), debris flows

•Sed struc - cross-stratified sandstones, gravel channel lags, channel lenses, radiating paleocurrent indicators

•Geometry - thick, wedge-shaped deposits, limited areal extent

•Assoc envir - Up dip high relief areas - Down dip alluvial plain (braided fluvial to meandering)

•Fossils - rare terrestrial species, poor preservation

Page 51: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

VII Mountain

•General

- High energy - High relief - Rarely preserved - Igneous and metamorphic cores

•Sediments - synorogenic conglomerates, immature sediments (arkoses)

•Sed struc - clastic wedges, unconformities

•Geometry - elongate features

•Assoc envir - glacial, alluvial fan, foreland basin

•Fossils - very few

Page 52: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

VIII Foreland Basin

•General - stable continental area marginal to an orogenic belt, “moat” generated by regional isostatic response to load of orogenic belt

•Sediments - synorogenic clastic wedges - Thick - Coarse - Poorly sorted - Immature mineralogies

•Geometry - elongate, parallel to mountain belts

•Assoc envir - uplifting mountain belts

•Fossils - rare

Page 53: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

IX Glacial (P&S p. 157-158)

•General - abundance varies over time

•Sediments - very poorly sorted deposits (tills), immature outwash,

•Sed struc - Glacial polish and striations, dropstones in lake and marine settings, varves in associated lakes

•Geometry - narrow, valley-fill (mountain glaciers) to extensive sheets (continental glaciers)

•Assoc envir - alpine, glaciofluvial (braided stream), loess plains, lakes

•Fossils - broken and abraded in tills, well preserved in lakes

Page 54: Keys to Sedimentary Environments I Sediment Composition and Texture II Sedimentary Structures - Inorganic - Organic (Trace Fossils) III Geometry of Rock.

Ice Facts

•10% Earth’s land surface covered by ice today

•20% Earth’s land surface consists of permafrost

•Ice caps up to 3,000 m thick

•Influences sea level (~100 m lower @ 12 Ka)

•Affects Earth’s albedo (reflectivity) and, therefore, climate

•Several intervals in Earth history had more extensive ice - Pleistocene (2 Ma - 10 Ka) - Pennsylvanian (300 Ma) - Proterozoic (650 Ma)