Geography, asked by saikat47, 10 months ago

2 differences between clastic and non clastic rocks​

Answers

Answered by 3420sanjaybabug
2

Explanation:

Rocks can be put into three main

groups. They are grouped by how the rocks

formed. Sedimentary (sed-uh-MEN-tuh-ree)

rocks are formed on or near Earth's surface.

Sedimentary rocks are divided into other

groups. They are clastic or non-clastic. This

grouping tells more about how the rocks

formed and what they formed from.

2 Rocks that are made of bits of other

rocks that have been weathered, eroded, and

deposited are called clastic rocks. Clasts are

the fragments of rocks and minerals.

Examples of clastic rocks are sandstone and

mudstone. Non-clastic rocks are created

when water evaporates or from the remains of plants and animals. Limestone is a non-clastic

sedimentary rock.

3 Clastic sedimentary rocks are classified by the shape of their grains. Grains can be very angular,

angular, rounded, or well rounded. The shape of the grains gives rocks their texture. The texture may

feel like sandpaper, or it may feel smooth and greasy. When mineral grains are carried by wind, water,

or ice, they bump into each other. When they do, the corners of the grains get broken off and smoothed.

The more bumping that happens, the smaller and smoother the grains become.

4 Sediments from glaciers are often very angular. The ice of the glacier protects the sediments from

bumping together. Grains carried by wind are often well rounded because they constantly bump

together. Sediments carried by water are smooth with rounded edges. The farther they are carried by

water or the more forceful the water is, the smoother the rocks become.

5 Grain size is still another way to classify these rocks. Shale is formed from clay. Its grains are often

so small that they cannot be seen without a microscope. Conglomerate is a sedimentary rock that has

very large grains. Conglomerate rock may contain pebbles two-tenths of an inch across or larger. The

"grains" may be boulders the size of footballs!

6 The grains of conglomerate rocks are cemented together with sand. Weight presses down from

layers above. Water seeps in, carrying dissolved minerals that cement the loose sand and clasts together.

7 The grains in conglomerate rocks often have smooth, rounded edges. That is because they were

deposited by fast-flowing rivers. Breccia, on the other hand, is made of sharp-edged, large grains. The

grains may be pebble-sized or larger. These grains were deposited by rivers on steep slopes or by

glaciers.

8 Sedimentary rocks are grouped according to their origin, composition, grain size, and grain shape.

Answered by lonefahaiz
2

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