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  2. Breccia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breccia

    Breccia is composed of coarse rock fragments held together by cement or a fine-grained matrix. [5] Like conglomerate, breccia contains at least 30 percent of gravel-sized particles (particles over 2mm in size), but it is distinguished from conglomerate because the rock fragments have sharp edges that have not been worn down. [6]

  3. Fault breccia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fault_breccia

    Fault breccia has no cohesion; it is normally an unconsolidated rock type, unless cementation took place at a later stage. Sometimes a distinction is made between fault gouge and fault breccia, the first has a smaller grain size.

  4. List of rock types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rock_types

    Banded iron formation – Layered iron-rich sedimentary rock; Breccia – Rock composed of angular fragments; Calcarenite – Type of limestone that is composed predominantly of sand-size grains; Chalk – Soft carbonate rock; Chert – Hard, fine-grained sedimentary rock composed of cryptocrystalline silica

  5. Fault gouge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fault_gouge

    Fault gouge is a type of fault rock best defined by its grain size. It is found as incohesive fault rock (rock which can be broken into its component granules at the present outcrop, only aided with fingers/pen-knife), with less than 30% clasts >2mm in diameter. [1] Fault gouge forms in near-surface fault zones with brittle deformation mechanisms.

  6. Conglomerate (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conglomerate_(geology)

    Conglomerate (/ k ən ˈ ɡ l ɒ m ər ɪ t /) is a sedimentary rock made up of rounded gravel-sized pieces of rock surrounded by finer-grained sediments (such as sand, silt, or clay). The larger fragments within conglomerate are called clasts, while the finer sediment surrounding the clasts is called the matrix.

  7. Grain size - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grain_size

    Grain size (or particle size) is the diameter of individual grains of sediment, or the lithified particles in clastic rocks. The term may also be applied to other granular materials . This is different from the crystallite size, which refers to the size of a single crystal inside a particle or grain.

  8. Sedimentary rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedimentary_rock

    The grain size can be expressed as a diameter or a volume, and is always an average value, since a rock is composed of clasts with different sizes. The statistical distribution of grain sizes is different for different rock types and is described in a property called the sorting of the rock. When all clasts are more or less of the same size ...

  9. Clastic rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clastic_rock

    An example of clastic environment would be a river system in which the full range of grains being transported by the moving water consist of pieces eroded from solid rock upstream. Grain size varies from clay in shales and claystones; through silt in siltstones; sand in sandstones; and gravel, cobble, to boulder sized fragments in conglomerates ...