What can sediments tell us?

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Undergraduate Geology - Part 2 (Sedimentary Processes and Products) Note on What can sediments tell us?, created by siobhan.quirk on 18/05/2013.
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The sizes, size range and roundess of sediments are all related to how the sediments were transported, because wind, water and ice vary in terms of energy and viscosity Fine grained, well rounded sediments have been transported for a longer time than coarse grained angular fragments. The shape of grains depends on the type of rock or mineral from which they are made. Sedimentary deposits in which all of the grains are of similar size have been transported in higher energy conditions than those where there is a wide range of sizes. How sediments were transported is related to environmental factors, such as climate. SortingA sedimentary deposit of grains that are all the same size would be described as very well sorted. One with a wide range of sizes would be termed very poorly sorted. Sorting provides information about how sediments were transported. Wind does not transport very coarse grains. It deposits well sorted sands as energy and velocity decrease. Finer grains are blown further, forming deposits elsewhere.Rivers flowing with high energy may transport coarse as well as medium and fine grained sediment. As energy levels fall, larger heavier grains are deposited first, medium sized grains are transported further and finer grains are deposited last. Poorly sorted sediment has usually not been transported far because the transporting medium lost energy quickly. A desert strem that rapidly dries up due to infiltration or high rates of evaporation will deposit the sediment very quickly. A meltwater stream from a glacier will lose energy as melting stops after the summer thaw has ended and sediment will be deposited over a short period of time.Grain Size Analysis of SedimentsGrain size data is plotted as cumulative frequency curves. Well sorted sediments have almost vertical curves. Poorly sorted sediments have curves that stretch over a wide range of sizes. The degree of sorting can be quantified. Coefficient of sorting (p): (phi 84 - phi 16) divided by 2Charactertistics of sediments related to transportWind blown dune sand in a high energy environment: fine to medium sand all quartz sometimes red due to iron oxide well rounded very well sorted, so that most of the sediment is in one sieve, as fine sand is easiest for the wind to carry Ice - deposited as glacial till in a low energy environment: varies from very coarse to very fine varied - any rock fragments and clay angular to subangular very poorly sorted River deposit of sand in channel - usually high energy with fast currents coarse to fine sand quartz and mica with rock fragments angular near to source but subangular to subrounded downstream poorly sorted near source of river - moderately sorted downstream gives wide range of sediment sizes Beach or offshore bar in sea - high energy medium sand - sometimes coarse (pebbles and gravel) close to shore and on beaches nearly all quartz with some shell or rock fragments subrounded to rounded moderately sorted with sediment mainly in a few sieves Gravity - low energy varies from very coarse in rocks to very fine in soil creep varied - any rock fragments angular to subangular very poorly sorted - larger fragments sometimes found at base of slope

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