Learn Sedimentology from the Scratch




Learn Sedimentology from the Scratch

Sedimentology, scientific discipline that is concerned with the physical and chemical properties of sedimentary rocks and the processes involved in their formation, including the transportation, deposition, and lithification (transformation to rock) of sediments. The objective of much sedimentological research is the interpretation of ancient environmental conditions in sediment source areas and depositional sites. Sedimentologists study the constituents, textures, structures, and fossil content of the deposits laid down in different geographic environments. By these means they can differentiate between continental, littoral, and marine deposits of the geologic record. Importance of sedimentary rocks.

Sedimentary rocks provide a multitude of products which modern and ancient society has come to utilise.

  • Art: marble, although a metamorphosed limestone, is an example of the use of sedimentary rocks in the pursuit of aesthetics and art

  • Architectural uses: stone derived from sedimentary rocks is used for dimension stone and in architecture, notably slate, a meta-shale, for roofing, sandstone for load-bearing buttresses

  • Ceramics and industrial materials: clay for pottery and ceramics including bricks; cement and lime derived from limestone.

  • Economic geology: sedimentary rocks host large deposits of SEDEX ore deposits of lead-zinc-silver, large deposits of copper, deposits of gold, tungsten, Uranium, and many other precious minerals, gemstones and industrial minerals including heavy mineral sands ore deposits

  • Energy: petroleum geology relies on the capacity of sedimentary rocks to generate deposits of petroleum oils. Coal and oil shale are found in sedimentary rocks. A large proportion of the world's uranium energy resources are hosted within sedimentary successions.

  • Groundwater: sedimentary rocks contain a large proportion of the Earth's groundwater aquifers. Our understanding of the extent of these aquifers and how much water can be withdrawn from them depends critically on our knowledge of the rocks that hold them (the reservoir).

Petrology: Sedimentology & Basin Analysis

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What you will learn
  • Students will learn about sedimentary structures, flow regimes
  • Primary sedimentary structures
  • Secondary sedimentary structures

Rating: 5

Level: Intermediate Level

Duration: 20.5 hours

Instructor: John Martin


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