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INFORMATIVE READING- Rocks from fragments3.2.1 Read the text (Part 1, Part 2) and for statements 1-12, choose the best answer: A, B, C or D. Then explain the words in bold. Part 1 Most sedimentary rocks form from particles eroded from the rocks on land. Their main ingredients are clasts (rock fragments) of quartz, feldspar and clay minerals. These fragments range in size from microscopic grains to boulders. More than 90% of all sedimentary rock contains particles no bigger than a sand grain. Many geologists classify such particles by size in two main groups. The (fine-grained) lutites with grains less than 0.06 mm diameter produce mudstone, siltstone and shale. The (medium-grained) arenites or sandstones with grains of 0.06-2 mm give arkose, graywacke and orthoquartzite. Here are brief descriptions of six fine- and medium- grained rocks. 1. Mudstone- solid rock made of clay minerals of less than 0.004mm diameter. 2. Shale- mudstone, siltstone or similar fine-grained rock of silt and clay split easily along its bedding planes. Shale accounts for more than 80% of all sedimentary rock. 3. Siltstone-rock formed of particles 0.004-0.06mm in diameter. 4. Orthoquartzite- a “clean” or pure arenite mainly made of quartz after other substances have been removed. (Arenites account for more than 10% of all sedimentary rock) 5. Arkose- an arenite rich in feldspar derived from gneiss or granite. 6. Graywacke- a muddy, often grayish sandstone with mixed-size particles including quartz, clay minerals and others.
Part 2 Rudites (from the Latin rudis - coarse) are clasts (rock fragments) coarser than a sand grain. Mixes with finer particles, rudites can be consolidated into natural concretes called conglomerates and breccias. Conglomerates are named from the Latin for “lumped together”. They contain rounded fragments – pebbles, cobbles and boulders – and often represent waterborne and watersorted remnants of eroded mountain ranges or retreating rocky coasts. They accumulate along mountain fronts, in shallow coastal waters, and elsewhere; becoming mixed with sand, then bound by natural cement. How clasts in a conglomerate lie sorted, packed and graded offers clues to how or where it was laid down. The thickest masses of conglomerate – as in the Siwalik Formation of the Himalayas’ foothills – mark the aftermath of an orogeny. Breccias (from the Italian for “rubble”) are rocks containing sharp-edged, unworn, usually poorly sorted fragments, often embedded in a clay-rich matrix. Breccias form usually near their place of origin; their clasts have not been carried far enough to suffer rounding by abrasion. Many breccias originate in talus, deserts, mudslides, faulting, meteorite impact, or shrinkage of evaporite beds. Authorities tend to separate conglomerates and breccias from tillites – poorly sorted, ice-eroded, ice-borne debris consolidated into solid rock. Many tillite clasts are faceted, with slightly rounded edges. Ancient tillites occur in South America, Africa, India and Australia. (David Lambert “The Field Guide to Geology” 1988, Cambridge University Press)
Fig. 34. Conglomerate Fig. 35. Breccia 1. Most sedimentary rocks are formed from A. eroded rocks B. eroded particles C. eroded sand 2. The size of particles in most sedimentary rocks A. bigger than sand grain B. no bigger than sand grain C. the same as sand grain 3. Geologists divide particles by size into A. two groups B. three groups C. four groups 4. Lutites are A. medium-grained B. coarse-grained C. fine-grained 5. An example of arenites are A. sandstones B. greywacke C. siltstone 6. Fine-grained rocks are A. mudstone, shale, orthoquartzite B. mudstone, shale, siltstone C. shale, arkose, graywacke 7. Rudites can be consolidated into natural concretes called A. conglomerates and breccias B. clasts and conglomerates C. breccias and clasts 8. Conglomerates is a Latin word which means A. coarse B. rubble C. lumped together 9. Conglomerates accumulate in A. shallow coastal waters B. shallow lakes C. shallow coast lines 10. Conglomerates contain A. rounded fragments B. coarse debris C. poorly sorted fragments 11. Breccias is usually embodies in A. natural cement-sand B. solid rock C. clay-rich matrix 12. Tillites are different from conglomerates and breccias because A. clasts with slightly rounded edges B. ice-eroded debris C. poorly sorted fragments 3.2.2 Read the text once more and fill in the charts with the necessary information from part 1 and part 2. Sedimentary rocks
Types of sedimentary rocks
3.2.3 Give detailed information to the following questions. 1. What are the main ingredients in sedimentary rocks? 2. How many groups according to particle-size are there? 3. What are fine-grained particles? 4. What are medium-grained particles? 5. Classify the following rocks according to grain-size: - mudstone - orthoquartzite - shale - arkose - siltstone - graywacke (grey) 6. Where do rock-forming fragments settle? 7. What are the four components of sandstone? 8. According to components, what are the four types of sandstone? 9. What is the percentage of sedimentary rocks? 10. What are the ingredients in a clastic sedimentary rock? (draw a diagram)
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