1 / 14

Cryptozoic Rocks

Cryptozoic Rocks. Archean rocks. Greenstones: Meta-volcanic rocks, including Basalt (with pillows) Komatiites Andesite/rhyolite (less common, toward the tops of sequences) Meta-greywackes Volcanic rock fragments Feldspars Poorly sorted and rounded Graded bedding. Greenstones.

Mercy
Télécharger la présentation

Cryptozoic Rocks

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cryptozoic Rocks

  2. Archean rocks • Greenstones: • Meta-volcanic rocks, including • Basalt (with pillows) • Komatiites • Andesite/rhyolite (less common, toward the tops of sequences) • Meta-greywackes • Volcanic rock fragments • Feldspars • Poorly sorted and rounded • Graded bedding

  3. Greenstones http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn14818-discovery-of-worlds-oldest-rocks-challenged-.html http://scienceblogs.com/highlyallochthonous/2007/07/what_is_a_greenstone_belt.php

  4. Archean rocks • Gneiss belts • Granite gneisses • Granite • quartzites

  5. Gneiss belt http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/Sifz5y7ygBA1hpZjsZ3xow http://www.geosci.ipfw.edu/Geopics/Framesrc/Faults/quartzitefolds.html

  6. Interpretation • Greenstones = oceanic & subduction rock • Gneisses = teeny unstable continents • Many small, fast-moving thin plates with many subduction zones and many collisions • Thin plates allowed intraplate activity – mini-rifts and plate over-rides • Everything was much hotter, so faster rates and more metamorphism

  7. Proterozoic rocks • Lower Proterozoic: 2 common rock suites in North America • Type 1: • Well-sorted quartz sandstones • Quartz-rich greywackes • Limestones with stromatolites • Type 2: • Banded iron formations (BIFs) • Slates and dark greywackes

  8. BIFs

  9. BIFs are puzzling • Age: from Archean through Middle Proterozoic, with a bit at end of Proterozoic; most date from about 3.0-1.5 GY. • 90% of iron in rock is in the BIFs; they hold 20X more oxygen than currently in the atmosphere – yet deposited in an Fe-poor atmosphere • Very thin banding that goes for hundreds of kilometers

  10. BIFs are weird • Fine layering: • Iron-rich minerals (oxides, carbonates, sulfides, clays, amphiboles, micas) • Chert • But no redbeds as we know them from Phanerozoic rocks – no red shales or sandstones. So there could not be much free oxygen in the atmosphere.

  11. Possible explanations for BIF’s • Why so much iron? • Iron from volcanic eruptions • Iron coming from hydrothermal vents • Early weathering conditions were highly acidic – that would weather out and transport the iron. • So ocean was full of iron ions, and no oxygen ions.

  12. Possible explanations for BIF’s • Why alternating iron-rich & iron poor? • Evolution of photosynthetic organisms: they produce oxygen which immediately bonded with iron. • In warm water silica stays in solution but bacteria would produce more O2 and iron precipitation. Summer = red iron bands • In cold water silica is deposited, and bacteria become inactive. Winter = silica bands

  13. Why did BIF production stop? • Eventually enough O2 was produced to oxidize available iron, and so it started to build in atmosphere. • Development of ozone layer allowed organisms to invade surface waters: more efficient photosynthesis, much more rapid production of O2 • Free O2 set stage for evolution of more heterotrophs – organisms that use more O2 to find food, rather than more CO2 to make food

  14. Late Proterozoic • Mid-Continent: • Keweenawan suite: basalt, gabbro, red sandstones and shales • What’s the tectonic suite? • Yes, rift valley – a very long failed rift. • We will look at other regions in more depth

More Related