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  2. Kurkar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurkar

    Kurkar is the regional name for an aeolian quartz sandstone with carbonate cement, [3] in other words an eolianite or a calcarenite (calcareous sandstone or grainstone), found on the Levantine coast of the Mediterranean Sea in Turkey, [3] Syria, Lebanon, Israel, [4] the Gaza Strip [5] and northern Sinai Peninsula. [6]

  3. Arenite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arenite

    Other arenites include sandstones, arkoses, greensands, and greywackes. Arenites mainly form by erosion of other rocks or turbiditic re-deposition of sands. Some arenites contain a varying amount of carbonatic components and thus belong to the rock-category of carbonatic sandstones or silicatic limestones .

  4. List of sandstones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sandstones

    Steenpan (also Flatpan or Klippan), Free State province, near Wolvehoek; Table Mountain Sandstone Western Cape province, various quarry sites; numerous types, some without trade names, from the Karoo Supergroup in many quarries near Graaff-Reinet, Cradock, Queenstown, Aliwal North, Burgersdorp and Sterkstroom; Těšínský sandstone quarry ...

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  6. Lithic fragment (geology) - Wikipedia

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

    Lithic fragments, or lithics, are pieces of other rocks that have been eroded down to sand size and now are sand grains in a sedimentary rock.They were first described and named (in their modern definitions) by Bill Dickinson in 1970. [1]

  7. Conglomerate (geology) - Wikipedia

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

    They are closely related to sandstones in origin, and exhibit many of the same types of sedimentary structures, such as tabular and trough cross-bedding and graded bedding. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Fanglomerates are poorly sorted, matrix-rich conglomerates that originated as debris flows on alluvial fans and likely contain the largest accumulations of ...

  8. Concretion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concretion

    For example, concretions in sandstones or shales are commonly formed of a carbonate mineral such as calcite; those in limestones are commonly an amorphous or microcrystalline form of silica such as chert, flint, or jasper; while those in black shale may be composed of pyrite. [18]

  9. QFL diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qfl_diagram

    A QFL diagram or QFL triangle is a type of ternary diagram that shows compositional data from sandstones and modern sands, point counted using the Gazzi-Dickinson method. The abbreviations used are as follows: Q – quartz; F – feldspar; L – lithic fragments