Post on 14-Dec-2015
Investigating Sediments
• Sediment Sieving• Calculating Ca CO3
Content of Sediment Samples
• Point Counts
• Measuring a,b and c axes of Clasts
Sieving of Sediment SamplesAfter returning from the field with sediment samples in clearly labelled bags
Open up the bags and pour each sample carefully into a suitable plastic or cardboard container
Spread the sediment sample out into a thin layer which completely covers the base of the container
Place the containers in a location where they will dry out completely and not be disturbed. A sunny window sill is ideal.
Alternatively pour the sample into a foil container and leave in the oven overnight at a temperature of 140°C
Cleaning the Sieve Stack
Take a stack of sieves from - 4 to + 4 phi and arrange in descending mesh order from coarsest to finest with the collecting pan at the base
Take each sieve in turn and brush vigorously with the special brush to remove any particles trapped from previous investigations
Weighing the Empty Sieves
Weigh each sieve empty in turn plus the collecting pan and make a note of the results on A4 paper.
Re-assemble the sieve stack in order, coarsest (16mm) at the top to finest (0.063mm) at the bottom with the collecting pan underneath
Preparing to Sieve the Samples
Place a suitable container on top of an electronic balance, preferably with an accuracy of 0.1g or better
Use the tare facility to zero the display, then carefully add material by hand until 1000.0g appears on the digital display
Check that the sieves fit snugly together, any possible gaps should be sellotaped, to avoid loss of sediment during shaking
Sieving the sediment samples
Carefully pour the 1kg (1000g) sample into the top sieve and seal with the purpose-made lid
Shake the sieve stack for a minimum of five minutes using an up and down action interspersed with a circular motion.
It might be worth involving other students here to save on elbow grease! Ideally the sample should be shaken for at least 15 minutes
Re-weighing After Shaking
Take off the lid from the sieve stack and carefully dismantle the sieves in size order
Re-weigh each sieve and the collection pan with its contents on the electronic balance
Record the sieve weight plus sediment value on A4 paper
Calculating the % Calcium Carbonate content of a beach or dune sand sample
Place a suitable beaker on an electronic scale that measures to at least the accuracy of 0.1g
Press the tare function to re-set the scale readout to zero
Gradually add the sand sample by sprinkling it carefully until 5.0g is recorded by the display
Remove the beaker from the scales and gradually pour in a few centimetres of 0.5 molar hydrochloric acid
The calcium carbonate content of the sand will effervesce violently and release carbon dioxide
Carefully swirl the contents of the beaker until the reaction runs to completion ie stops fizzing
Continue adding acid and stir with a plastic or glass rod to ensure that all grains enter into reactions
When the sand/acid mixture stops effervescing all the calcium carbonate in the sample will have been dissolved
Weigh a sheet of filter paper on the electronic balance, then make a funnel to filter the sand/acid mixture
Rinse out sediment that sticks to the side of the beaker and pour into the filter paper cone
When all the liquid has passed through the filter paper, open it out fully and place in a suitable container on top of absorbent paper
Place the container in a location where it will be able to dry out fully and not be disturbed
A sunny window sill site or on top of a radiator would probably be ideal
Re-weigh the filter paper and filtrate when fully dry
Subtract the weight of the filter paper recorded previously
Express the weight loss from the original 5.0g sample of sediment as a percentage
This gives the calcium carbonate content as percentage by weight loss
Point Count Of 100 Grains
This simple technique allows the mineral composition of a sand sample to be determined as percentage constituents
Take an A4 sheet of plain paper and draw a thin black line on it approximately 10cm long. Rub a Pritt Stick (or similar) along the line
Carefully sprinkle a sand sample along the line so that the grains are clearly separate from each other
Place the paper with the sand grains under a binocular microscope
Bring the sand grains into focus using the binocular microscope with the black line in the centre of the field of vision
Using a tally sheet or proforma, to record your observations attempt to identify 100 consecutive grains that lie closest to, or are actually on the black line
Experiment with different magnifications x10, x25 and x40 depending on the size of the constituent grains
A Simple Guide To Grain IdentificationQuartz: grey, white, colourless, glassy, conchoidal fracture, rounded or subrounded grains
Feldspars: pink/flesh or creamy white colour, blocky or rectangular shape due to 2 cleavages meeting at 90°
Calcite: pinkish, yellowish, brown, white, may show ornament/ribbing if derived from shell fragments
Micas: black or silver in colour, pearly lustre, present as thin flakes due to perfect basal cleavage
Tourmaline: greenish black in colour, often present as thin needle-like slivers
Metallic ore grains: metallic lustre, black, silvery or grey in colour, often appear like bits of ‘screwed up silver paper’
Other: anything that does not fit in with the above
An example from a student’s notebook to show the recording of point counts for a beach and dune sand (2 samples of each)
When the point count of 100 grains has been completed, the composition as percentage constituents can be established
This information is easily plotted as a pie chart
It is interesting to compare results within the teaching group to see how much variation is evident
Remember just 100 grains from a sample of probably many billions is unlikely to be very representative!
Measuring Particle Size and Shape
a axis
Sediment samples with larger clasts allow measurement of their a, b and c axes
The a axis is the longest direction that can be measured on any clast
B axes are the maximum distances at right angles to the a axis on the clast
C axes are the shortest and are usually the ones on which the clasts would naturally lie, ie are frequently vertical
b axis
c axis
Measuring Particle Size and Shape
• The a, b and c axial values can be measured by eye using a ruler, but much more accurately using external calipers
• The Excel sediment spreadsheet calculates values for sphericity and flatness once the axial lengths have been entered into the appropriate cells
• The spreadsheet also classifies clasts as spheres, rods, blades or discs and plots them automatically onto a Zinng diagram using b/a and c/b ratios as co-ordinates
Enter the Data into the Excel Spreadsheet
Enter the data into the spreadsheet:
Sieve weight ‘empty’
Sieve weight ‘full’
a, b and c axial measurements of at least 10 clasts from any one sample
The spreadsheet will calculate all the values needed for the investigation
Spreadsheets
Bi modal distributionPositively skewed distribution with a higher proportion of coarser material
Very poorly sorted as the line slopes gently from left to right.
All sieves and pan contained some material
1Periglacial Head
80% of material coarser than 1mm
Spreadsheets
Periglacial Head Deposit
Sphericity values quite low to moderate from 0.4 to 0.6
Flatness values moderate to high 283 to 475
Most of the clasts, 9 out of 10 classify as blades
produced by freeze-thaw?