Horizontal and continuous beds

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Presentation transcript:

Horizontal and continuous beds

Folded beds

Tilted beds

Discordant relationships Bedding above the discordance Discordance (nonconformity) Tilted bedding below discordance (nonconformity)

Sedimentary structures Stratification and bedforms: Bedding-plane markings: Bedding and lamination - Laminated bedding - Graded bedding - Massive (structureless) bedding Bedforms Irregular stratification Groove cast; striations, bounce, brush, prod, and roll mark Flute cast Load cast Mudcracks and syneresis cracks Other structures: - Sedimentary sills and dykes

Bedding Beds, or strata are tabular or lenticular layers of sedimentary rock that have lithologic, textural, or structural unity that clear distinguishes them from layers above and bellow. Groups of similar beds or cross beds are called bedsets.

Description of bedding Thick beds Beds that are 30–100 cm thick. Very thick beds are tens of m thick. Medium beds Beds that are 10–30 cm thick Thin beds Beds that are less than 3 cm thick Thinly laminated beds Beds that are less than 0.3 cm thick Rhythmic beds A sequence of beds in which the contrast between adjacent beds is repeated periodically for a substantial thickness of strata

Description of bedding Lateral continuity Termination - merging of bedding planes (pinch-out) - lateral gradation of composition (die out) - meeting of crosscutting features such as channel or unconformity Parallel bedding Wavy bedding

Mechanisms of bedding formation sedimentation from suspension horizontal accretion from a moving bed load (bed load is a part of the stream load that moves on or immediately above the stream bed; stream load is all material that is transported by a stream) encroachment into the lee of an obstacle.

Graded bedding Gradual change of grain size within a bed Commonly produced by turbidity currents Helps to determine the base (lower surface) and the top (upper surface) of a bed

GRADED BEDDING TOP BOTTOM Conglomerates Sandstones Up The Section

Bedforms – structures of the surface of a bed Cross-bedding Ripple cross-lamination Flaser and lenticular bedding

Ripple mark

Assymetric flow ripples from Vermillon River (Asimetrik akıntı ripple’ları. Vermillon Nehri.)

Appearence of antidunes from air

Cross stratification Cross stratification from Jurassic age Navajo sandstones. Flow direction is from left to right Cross str. occurs because of overlaping of ripplemarks.

Tabular cross bed (düzlemsel) Convulute crs. Bed.(Kama şeklinde) Hummocky crs bed.

Irregular stratification Convolute bedding and lamination Flame structures Channels Scour-and-fill structures

Convulute lamination

Synsedimentary Faults

Penecontemporaneous folds in the Maranosa Arenaci (Italian Apennines)

Bedding-plane markings Groove cast; striations, bounce, brush, prod, and roll mark Flute cast Load cast Mudcracks and syneresis cracks

Grooves (Oluk yapıları) Striations (Buzul kertikleri)

Kaval yapıları (flute casts). Akıntı yönü yukardan aşağıya.

Groove casts Flute marks Load casts

Load structures They form prior to lithification where a denser sand lies on top of less dense mud and a disturbance by a storm or an earthquake causes blobs of sand to sink into the underlying mud.

Ball-and-pillow structures protrusions extending downward from a sand layer into an underlying mud or very fine sand layer

Mudcracks and syneresis cracks

Carbonate nodule within shales Nodule : A small rounded mass in a contrasting rock matrix.

Sedimentary sills and dykes

Biogenic sedimentary structures

Biogenic structures

Bioturbation – horizontal bedding is disturbed by burrow and boring channels of fossils

CROSSBEDDINGS CURRENT DIRECTION Cross-bedding Bedding