SEDIMENTARY STRUCTURE
Erosional sedimentary structures
Flute marks, Groove marks, Channels and scours
Depositional sedimentary structures
Bedding and lamination, Current ripples, Dunes, Cross stratification (Cross bedding, Cross lamination) Graded bedding, mudcracks
Post-depositional sedimentary structures
Slides and slumps, overturned cross bedding, Convolute bedding, Load casts, dish-and-pillar structure
Biogenic sedimentary structures
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Flute marks
Flute marks on sole of turbidite. Flow from bottom to top
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Groove marks
Groove marks on sole of turbidite sandstone.
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Channel and scours
Downcutting of channel sands into horizontally bedded floodplain mudrocks Sandstone at arrow is a crevasse splay deposit.
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Lamination
Silt-grade quartz laminae alternate with clay and organic-rich laminae.
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Parting lineation
Parting lineation or primary current lineation on the bedding plane surface of fluvial sandstone.
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Ripple terminology
Current ripples are small-scale bedforms. They are asymmetric with a steeper, downstream-facing lee side and a gentle upstream-facing stoss side.
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The shape of the crests of ripples
Terminology for the shape of the crests of ripples and dunes formed by unidirectional currents.
Current ripples
Current ripples (flow to the right) with crests showing straight to catenary shape.
Planar cross stratification
This structure formed through the migration of straight-crested ripples, producing planar cross lamination.
This planar cross bedding is produced from the downcurrent migration of straightcrested subaqueous dunes.
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Trough cross stratification
Trough cross stratification formed through migration of 3D bedforms, lunate and sinuous dunes, producing trough cross bedding. Liguoid ripples give a trough cross lamination.
Trough cross bedding in a fluvial channel sandstone.
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Herring-bone cross bedding
Herring-bone cross bedding formed through tidal current reversals, in shallow-marine sediment.
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Climbing ripples
Where there is rapid deposition, ripples build up as well as forward, so that a ripple climbs up the stoss. of the one downstream. This produces climbingside ripple cross lamination
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Flaser bedding and lenticular bedding
Flaser bedding
Lenticular
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bedding
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Wave-formed ripples
Ripple profiles are symmetrical and crests bifurcate. Lacustrine sandstone.
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Interference ripples
Ripples on tidal flats show complicated patterns . resulting from changes in water depth, and wind and runoff direction.
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Hummocky cross stratification
An undulating bedding which is thought to be formed by wave-generated oscillatory flows or . combined flows (waves plus currents)produced by the passage of storms.
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Hummocky cross stratification
. Hummocky cross bedding in shallow-marine sandstone.
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Aeolian cross bedding
. The large scale, set heights are 5-10 m.
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Convoluted lamination
Convoluted and deformed lamination in a thin . siliciclastic turbidite.
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Overturned planar cross bedding
. Planar cross bedding showing overturning in downstream direction. Braided-stream sandstone.
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Load casts
Large load casts on the underside of fluvial sandstone.
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Sandstone pillows
Sandstone pillows formed by loading into mud (now fissile shale).
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Trace fossils
A. Crawling trails on base of turbidite sandstone. B. Vertical dwelling burrows, filled with oolite. C. Feeding-burrow system. . D. Borings of the bivalve.
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The End
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