Geography, asked by jeeday2002, 1 month ago

what is the structure of sedimentary rocks


jeeday2002: pls supply answer
shreyay183: Sedimentary structures include features like bedding, ripple marks, fossil tracks and trails, and mud cracks. ... Structures that are produced at the same time as the sedimentary rock in which they occur are called primary sedimentary structures. please mark me as brainliest
jeeday2002: yh, thanks
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Anonymous: please mark me as brainliest

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
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Sedimentary structures are the larger, generally three-dimensional physical features of sedimentary rocks; they are best seen in outcrop or in large hand specimens rather than through a microscope. Sedimentary structures include features like bedding, ripple marks, fossil tracks and trails, and mud cracks.

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Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Sedimentary structures are the larger, generally three-dimensional physical features of sedimentary rocks; they are best seen in outcrop or in large hand specimens rather than through a microscope. Sedimentary structures include features like bedding, ripple marks, fossil tracks and trails, and mud cracks.

Explanation:

Sedimentary structures are the larger, generally three-dimensional physical features of sedimentary rocks; they are best seen in outcrop or in large hand specimens rather than through a microscope. Sedimentary structures include features like bedding, ripple marks, fossil tracks and trails, and mud cracks. They conventionally are subdivided into categories based on mode of genesis. Structures that are produced at the same time as the sedimentary rock in which they occur are called primary sedimentary structures. Examples include bedding or stratification, graded bedding, and cross-bedding. Sedimentary structures that are produced shortly after deposition and as a result of compaction and desiccation are called penecontemporaneous sedimentary structures. Examples include mud cracks and load casts. Still other sedimentary structures like concretions, vein fillings, and stylolites form well after deposition and penecontemporaneous modification; these are known as secondary structures. Finally, others like stromatolites and organic burrows and tracks, though they may in fact be primary, penecontemporaneous, or even secondary, may be grouped as a fourth category—organic sedimentary structures.

Additional Info

Sedimentary Structures

Sedimentary structures are the larger, generally three-dimensional physical features of sedimentary rocks; they are best seen in outcrop or in large hand specimens rather than through a microscope. Sedimentary structures include features like bedding, ripple marks, fossil tracks and trails, and mud cracks. They conventionally are subdivided into categories based on mode of genesis. Structures that are produced at the same time as the sedimentary rock in which they occur are called primary sedimentary structures. Examples include bedding or stratification, graded bedding, and cross-bedding. Sedimentary structures that are produced shortly after deposition and as a result of compaction and desiccation are called penecontemporaneous sedimentary structures. Examples include mud cracks and load casts. Still other sedimentary structures like concretions, vein fillings, and stylolites form well after deposition and penecontemporaneous modification; these are known as secondary structures. Finally, others like stromatolites and organic burrows and tracks, though they may in fact be primary, penecontemporaneous, or even secondary, may be grouped as a fourth category—organic sedimentary structures.

Considerable attention is paid to the sedimentary structures exhibited by any sedimentary rock. Primary sedimentary structures are particularly useful because their abundance and size suggest the probable transporting and depositional agents. Certain varieties of primary sedimentary structures like cross-bedding and ripple marks display orientations that are consistently related to the direction of current movement. Such structures are referred to as directional sedimentary structures because they can be used to infer the ancient paleocurrent pattern or dispersal system by which a sedimentary rock unit was deposited. Other sedimentary structures are stratigraphic “top and bottom”

indicators. For example, the progressive upward decrease in clastic grain size diameters, known as graded bedding, would allow a geologist to determine which way is stratigraphically “up”—i.e., toward the younger beds in a dipping sedimentary bed. The suite (repeated sequence) of sedimentary structures in any single stratigraphic unit is another attribute by which that unit may be physically differentiated from others in the region.

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Anonymous: Sedimentary structures are the larger, generally three-dimensional physical features of sedimentary rocks; they are best seen in outcrop or in large hand specimens rather than through a microscope. Sedimentary structures include features like bedding, ripple marks, fossil tracks and trails, and mud cracks.
Anonymous: hope it helps
jeeday2002: yh
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