Abstract
The nature of detrital sedimentary (siliciclastic) rocks is determined by geological processes that occur in the four main Earth surface environments encountered over the sediment’s history from source to final sink: (i) the site of sediment production (provenance), where interactions among bedrock geology, tectonic uplift, and climate control weathering and erosion processes; (ii) the transport path, where the medium of transport, gradient, and distance to the depositional basin may modify the texture and composition of weathered material; (iii) the site of deposition, where a suite of physical, chemical, and biological processes control the nature of sediment accumulation and early burial modification; and (iv) the conditions of later burial, where diagenetic processes may further alter the texture and composition of buried sediments. Many of these geological processes leave characteristic geochemical signatures, making detrital sedimentary rocks one of the most important archives of geochemical data available for reconstructions of ancient Earth surface environments. Although documentation of geochemical data has long been a part of the study of sedimentation (e.g., Twenhofel, 1926, 1950; Pettijohn, 1949; Trask, 1955), the development and application of geochemical methods specific to sedimentary geological problems blossomed in the period following the Second World War (Degens, 1965; Garrels and Mackenzie, 1971) and culminated in recent years, as reflected by the publication of various texts on marine geochemistry (e.g., Chester, 1990, 2000), biogeochemistry (e.g., Schlesinger, 1991; Libes, 1992), and organic geochemistry (e.g., Tissot and Welte, 1984; Engel and Macko, 1993). Coincident with the growth of these subdisciplines a new focus has.
Original language | English (US) |
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Title of host publication | Sediments, Diagenesis, and Sedimentary Rocks |
Publisher | Elsevier Inc |
Pages | 115-158 |
Number of pages | 44 |
Volume | 7-9 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9780080548074 |
ISBN (Print) | 9780080437514 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Dec 4 2003 |
Funding
The authors wish to acknowledge financial support of the National Science Foundation (e.g., EAR-9725441, EAR-0001093), as well as Northwestern University and the University of Missouri, which made possible some of the projects upon which this compilation is based. The thesis work of our students Adam Murphy, Josef Werne, Matt Hurtgen, and Steve Meyers contributed greatly to the progression of ideas developed herein, and Steve Meyers is specifically thanked for providing significant scientific and editorial input to the manuscript. Lastly, thanks go to the other members of the NU—Sedimentary Research Group (Joniell Borges, Jason Flaum, Michael Fortwengler, Rob Locklair, Petra Pancoskova, and Ramya Sivaraj), who all helped in compiling parts of the bibliography.
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Earth and Planetary Sciences