File:Chalk ("Upper Chalk" Formation, Upper Cretaceous; White Cliffs of Dover, England, southern Britain).jpg

原始檔案(864 × 715 像素,檔案大小:789 KB,MIME 類型:image/jpeg

摘要

描述
English: Chalk from the Cretaceous of Britain.

Sedimentary rocks form by the solidification of loose sediments. Loose sediments become hard rocks by the processes of deposition, burial, compaction, dewatering, and cementation.

There are three categories of sedimentary rocks: 1) Siliciclastic sedimentary rocks form by the solidification of sediments produced by weathering & erosion of any previously existing rocks. 2) Biogenic sedimentary rocks form by the solidification of sediments that were once-living organisms (plants, animals, micro-organisms). 3) Chemical sedimentary rocks form by the solidification of sediments formed by inorganic chemical reactions. Most sedimentary rocks have a clastic texture, but some are crystalline.

Limestone is a common biogenic sedimentary rock composed of the mineral calcite (CaCO3), which bubbles in acid. Many geologically young limestones are composed of aragonite (also CaCO3). Numerous varieties of limestone exist (e.g., fine-grained limestone/micritic limestone/lime mudstone, coquina, chalk, wackestone, packstone, grainstone, rudstone, rubblestone, coralstone, calcarenite, calcisiltite, calcilutite, calcirudite, floatstone, boundstone, framestone, oolitic limestone, oncolitic limestone, etc.). Most limestones represent deposition in ancient warm, shallow ocean environments.

Chalk is distinctive variety of limestone that is soft, whitish, and powdery. Chalk is composed of calcite (CaCO3), and will bubble in acid. The most spectacular chalk locality on Earth is the White Cliffs of Dover (farm1.static.flickr.com/119/290719612_5a27cbaf61.jpg), along the southern shores of Britain. The rocks there are Cretaceous in age (“creta” means “chalk”).

Chalk is a biogenic sedimentary rock, but it is not obvious how this white powdery material represents the remains of once-living organisms. When examined under a scanning electron microscope, chalk powder is seen to be composed of immense numbers of exceedingly small microfossils, principally coccoliths (www.soes.soton.ac.uk/staff/tt/eh/pics/lith2.gif). Coccoliths are calcitic plates that once covered a living cell (upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d9/Emiliania_hux...). The cell was an entire organism called a coccolithophorid (Kingdom Protista, Phylum Chrysophyta, Class Coccolithophorida). Coccolithophorids are unicellular, photosynthetic organisms. They are often called “algae”, but they’re better called photosynthetic protists. When they die, the cell degrades, and the numerous hard calcitic plates covering the cell fall to the seafloor.

Chalk generally forms in moderately deep marine environments (but not in the deepest ocean depths), where high numbers of coccolith plates can accumulate as sediments, without calcite dissolution, and undiluted by muddy or sandy sediments washed in from the continents.
日期
來源 https://www.flickr.com/photos/jsjgeology/16610898008/
作者 James St. John

授權條款

w:zh:創用CC
姓名標示
此檔案採用創用CC 姓名標示 2.0 通用版授權條款。
您可以自由:
  • 分享 – 複製、發佈和傳播本作品
  • 重新修改 – 創作演繹作品
惟需遵照下列條件:
  • 姓名標示 – 您必須指名出正確的製作者,和提供授權條款的連結,以及表示是否有對內容上做出變更。您可以用任何合理的方式來行動,但不得以任何方式表明授權條款是對您許可或是由您所使用。
這幅圖片原始出處為Flickr的https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/16610898008 ,作者為James St. John 。經機器人FlickreviewR 2在2021年3月18日審查後確定為採用cc-by-2.0的協議授權使用。

2021年3月18日

說明

添加單行說明來描述出檔案所代表的內容
Chalk, a variety of limestone

在此檔案描寫的項目

描繪內容

image/jpeg

ad03c5f0e90ed12b113bc86dd3a90b24dfcb904b

斷定方法:​SHA-1 中文 (已轉換拼寫)

808,162 位元組

715 像素

864 像素

檔案歷史

點選日期/時間以檢視該時間的檔案版本。

日期/時間縮⁠圖尺寸使用者備⁠註
目前2021年3月18日 (四) 19:17於 2021年3月18日 (四) 19:17 版本的縮圖864 × 715(789 KB)Annawood2Uploaded a work by James St. John from https://www.flickr.com/photos/jsjgeology/16610898008/ with UploadWizard

全域檔案使用狀況

詮釋資料