| Themes > Science > Earth Sciences > Geology > Rocks and Minerals > Sedimentology | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Diameter (mm) | Sediment Name | Rock Type | |
|---|---|---|---|
| >256 | Boulder | Rudaceous | Conglomerate or Breccia |
| Between 256 and 64 | Cobble | ||
| Between 2 and 64 | Pebble | ||
| Between 2 and 0.625 | Sand | Arenaceous | Sandstone |
| Between 0.625 and 0.0039 | Silt | Argillaceous | siltstone |
| <0.0039 | Clay | Claystone or shale | |
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Textures in sedimentary rocks depend on the type of grains making up the rock.


Other properties of a sedimentary rock are porosity and permeability. The ability to store fluid (e.g. oil, gas or water) is the porosity. The porosity is expressed as a percentage and depends on the amount of pore space in the rock. The ability to allow a fluid to pass through a rock is the permeability. Fluid can pass through using cracks, fissures or space between grains.
A high porosity rock can have a low permeability if the pore space do not connect in three dimensionsThe structures in a rock tell us a great deal about the palaeoenvironment. This is where one of the great sayings in geology comes in use:
"The present is the key to the past" - the law of uniformatarianism
This essentially means if we can understand what processes occur today, for example, the forming of ripples in a tidal mud, then these principles can be applied to the geological record. Below are some examples of sedimentary structures and what formed them.
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Cross Bedding (or stratification). This shows some transport of grains by wind or water. These cross beds are formed by wind, forming dunes in a sand |
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Load casts and flame structures,
formed by heavy sand squashing mud.![]() ![]() This is a way up structure |
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Mudcracks formed from the drying out of mud |
A way-up structure tells us which way up the bed was originally deposited. Graded bedding usually occurs with the coarse grains at the bottom. If you find some graded bedding with coarse grains at the top, then the bed has probably been tectonically turned upside down (e.g. by folding).
Information provided by: http://www.hill.anorak.org.uk