Difference between revisions of "Sediment"
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| − | '''Sediment''' is eroded material deposited on the Earth by water, ice, or air.<ref>Stanley, Dr. Steven M. ''Earth System History 2nd Edition''. W.H. Freeman and Company, New York, 2005.</ref> Sediments are found in a wider variety of settings: from desert dunes, river deltas, mountain ranges, and even the deep sea floor<ref>ibid</ref> | + | '''Sediment''' is eroded material deposited on the Earth by water, ice, or air.<ref>Stanley, Dr. Steven M. ''Earth System History 2nd Edition''. W.H. Freeman and Company, New York, 2005.</ref> Sediments are found in a wider variety of settings: from desert dunes, river deltas, mountain ranges, and even the deep sea floor.<ref>ibid</ref> After enough grains have accumulated in the depositional environment, one of two different processes may occur and cause the formation of [[Sedimentary Rock]]. Either compressional forces will bond the sediment grains together, or other minerals may bond the grains together by precipitating between them from water sources flowing through the sedimentary environment. |
==References== | ==References== | ||
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[[Category:Earth Sciences]] | [[Category:Earth Sciences]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 03:32, June 24, 2016
Sediment is eroded material deposited on the Earth by water, ice, or air.[1] Sediments are found in a wider variety of settings: from desert dunes, river deltas, mountain ranges, and even the deep sea floor.[2] After enough grains have accumulated in the depositional environment, one of two different processes may occur and cause the formation of Sedimentary Rock. Either compressional forces will bond the sediment grains together, or other minerals may bond the grains together by precipitating between them from water sources flowing through the sedimentary environment.