Types of Rocks and Their Formation Harding Ranches
- Slides: 14
Types of Rocks and Their Formation © Harding Ranches, INC
Sedimentary Rock Formation: • Layers of sediment are deposited at the bottom of seas and lakes. • Over millions of years, the layers get compressed by the layers above. • The salts that are present in the layers of sediment start to crystallize out as the water is squeezed out. These salts help to cement the particles together.
Sedimentary Rock Identification: • Layers of sediment, easily scraped, and often crumble easily • Often contain fossils which are fragments of animals or plants preserved within the rock. Only sedimentary rocks contain fossils.
Sedimentary Rock at Harding Ranch Del Rio, Texas
Common Sedimentary Rock Sandstone
Common Sedimentary Rock Limestone
Metamorphic Rock Formation: • Earth movements can push all types of rock deeper into the Earth. • These rocks are then subjected to massive temperatures and pressures causing the crystalline structure and texture to CHANGE. • They do not become liquid, but become molten.
Metamorphic Rock Identification: • Hard rocks • Foliated bands of fused minerals • Crystalline structure with fused edges • Movement of the Earth’s lithospheric plates cause the heating and squeezing conditions that form metamorphic rocks
Common Metamorphic Rock • Slate
Common Metamorphic Rock • Gneiss
Igneous Rock Formation: • Molten rock cools and becomes solid. • Some igneous rocks form when magma below the surface slowly cools and hardens. • Some igneous rocks form when lava erupted from a volcano quickly cools.
Igneous Rock Identification: • Igneous rocks contain minerals randomly arranged in crystals. • If the rock has small crystals, this means that it had rapidly (FAST) cooled. • If the rock has large crystals, it means that it cooled slowly deep down within the crust without ever reaching the surface.
Common Igneous Rocks • Granite
Common Igneous Rock • Basalt
- Metamorphic rocks
- Igneous rock to metamorphic rock
- Extrusive igneous rocks
- Lasa naviance
- Sedimentary rocks
- Orthochemical rocks
- Igneous rocks extrusive and intrusive
- What is igneous rock
- Formation of metamorphic rocks
- How are rocks formed
- Process of formation of sedimentary rocks
- Parent rock of granite
- Sedimentary rocks leaving cert
- Chapter 20 section 2 the harding presidency
- Egerton v harding