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Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks

Processes of Formation, Diagenesis, and Lithification: Detailed Lecture Notes for Competitive Exams.

This set of detailed lecture notes is designed for competitive exams. It covers the essential concepts of weathering, transport, and deposition, followed by diagenesis and lithification, and ends with an overview of sedimentary rock classification, fossil content, and typical exam-style questions.

1. Introduction and Key Concepts

Sedimentary rocks form from the accumulation and consolidation of pre-existing materials or from the direct precipitation of minerals from fluids. The process is commonly broken into three sequential steps:

  • Weathering: Breakdown of rocks at or near the surface into sediment.
  • Transport and Deposition: Movement of sediments by gravity, water, wind, or ice.
  • Diagenesis and Lithification: Conversion of loose sediments into solid rock.

2. Weathering

2.1 Types of Weathering

A. Physical (Mechanical): Frost wedging, unloading, thermal expansion, abrasion. Increases surface area.

B. Chemical: Hydrolysis, hydration, dissolution, oxidation-reduction. Produces clay minerals and ions.

C. Biological: Organic acids and root wedging.

2.2 & 2.3 Products & Climate

Products: Residual soil, Regolith, Dissolved ions.

Climate: Chemical weathering dominates in warm/wet climates; Mechanical dominates in cold/arid climates.

3. Transport and Deposition

Environment Dominant Texture Key Features
River channel Poorly/Mod sorted Braided vs meandering channels
Delta Coarse to fine Prodelta to delta front
Beach/Shoreface Well-sorted/rounded Wave-formed ripple structures
Lake Fine-grained Quiet water, varves
Glacial Very poorly sorted Striated clasts, diamictites
Desert (aeolian) Well-sorted/rounded Dune fields, cross-bedding
Deep marine Fine clay/ooze Pelagic ooze, slow deposition

4. Diagenesis

4.1 Processes: Compaction, Cementation (calcite, silica, clay), Recrystallization, Dissolution, Replacement, and Authigenesis.

4.2 Textures: Porosity reduction and cementation patterns influencing strength/permeability.

5. Lithification

The process that converts loose sediments into solid sedimentary rock through:

  • Compaction: Volume and porosity reduction.
  • Cementation: Mineral precipitation in pores.
  • Kinetic Induction: Time-dependent grain locking.
  • Crystal Growth: Crystallization within voids.

6. Classification of Sedimentary Rocks

Clastic: Sandstone, shales, siltstone, conglomerate, breccia.
Chemical: Limestone, chert, rock salt.
Biogenic: Coal, fossiliferous limestone.

7. Diagenesis and Lithification in Practice

7.1 Sequence of Events

  • 1. Weathered material transported to basin.
  • 2. Deposition in low-energy environments.
  • 3. Burial increases pressure/temp.
  • 4. Compaction reduces porosity.
  • 5. Cementation via mineral precipitation.
  • 6. Lithified rock enters stratigraphic record.

7.2 Factors Controlling Diagenesis

  • Depth/Temp: Influence mineral stability.
  • Fluid Chemistry: Ion availability for cement.
  • Grain Size: Controls compaction rate.
  • Biological Activity: Affects depositional pathways.

8. Comparative Table: Rock Types

Type Primary Texture Main Cement/Matrix Environments
Clastic Sand, silt, clay grains Matrix or cement (silica, clays) Rivers, deserts, oceans
Chemical Interlocking crystals Precipitated minerals Evaporative basins, deep seas
Biogenic Fossil content dominates Carbonate mud and shells Reefs, shallow seas, swamps

9. Exam-Style Practice Questions

9.1 Short Answer

• Define diagenesis and lithification.

• Explain grain size influence on permeability.

• List three structures and their geological significance.

9.2 Conceptual

• Contrast weathering: Hot/Humid vs. Cold/Arid.

• Describe riverine to deltaic evolution.

9.3 Data-Based

• Infer environment for well-sorted sandstone with cross-bedding.

• Discuss diagenesis in fossiliferous limestone.

9.4 Numerical (Simple)

Problem: If a layer starts with 40% porosity and compacts to 20%, by what factor has porosity decreased? Explain the fluid flow implications.

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