What is limestone and how is it formed?

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What is limestone and how is it formed?. How is Limestone formed?. Task:. Using the information on the next slide you should come up with no more than 3 sentences that explain how limestone is formed and exposed to the elements. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of What is limestone and how is it formed?

  • What is limestone and how is it formed?

  • How is Limestone formed?

  • Task:Using the information on the next slide you should come up with no more than 3 sentences that explain how limestone is formed and exposed to the elements. It doesnt have to be as detailed but needs to show an understanding of the origins of limestone.

  • Limestone is formed from the fossilised remains of countless marine plants and animals, such as corals, which lived during the Carboniferous period, 345 - 280 million years ago.These former sea beds were moved from the Equator due to continental drift and forced above sea level 280 - 230 million years ago.During Glaciation the topsoil is scoured from the landscape exposing the limestone underneath to weathering. Formation

  • Carboniferous limestone landscapes are the result of:-

    The rock is divided into blocks as a result of breaks between the rock beds (bedding planes)

    Vertical cracks (joints) are created as the limestone dries out and pressure is released.bedding planejoint permeability - water passes easily through the rock by following the bedding planes and joints.

  • Limestone Features

  • Pot holes, swallow holes and shake holesCarboniferouslimestonefeaturesLimestonepavementsCaves andcavernsStalactites andstalagmitesLimestone features

  • Now to make a cheat booklet:

  • Malham, in the Yorkshire Dales, is famous for its limestone scenery. One feature that is particularly prominent is the limestone pavement..Limestone landscapes

  • Limestone Pavement - scraped clear of soil by repeated glaciation.

  • We can think of the limestone pavement as a chocolate bar:Limestone is an alkali rock and is weathered by rain which is acidic.Any water that lies in cracks within the rocks, dissolves the limestone over a long period of time, causing the cracks to widen.Limestone landscapes

  • Limestone pavements

  • Limestone pavement, showing its characteristic clints (blocks) and grikes (gaps).CLINTCLINTGRIKEGRIKE

  • Limestone PavementBefore weatheringAfter weatheringJointsBedding planesClintsGrikes

  • 2009 Higher Paper 1, Question 6 bChoose any one Carboniferous Limestone feature described in your answer to part (a) and, with the aid of annotated diagrams, explain how it was formed.

    Marks 6

  • Probably the most obvious (sensible!) Carboniferous Limestone feature to choosewould be a limestone pavement although some candidates may focus on limestonecaves and their associated underground landforms such as stalactites, stalagmitesand rock pillars.

    Answers which fail to make use of diagrams should score a maximum of 4.Sufficiently well annotated diagrams ought to be able to earn full marks.In explaining the formation of a limestone pavement, for example, candidatescould refer to such points as:

    the part played by glacial erosion (abrasion) in scraping away any overlyingsoil cover and thus exposing the horizontally-bedded, rectangular blocks oflimestone. joints formed in the limestone as it dried out and pressure was released. these joints/lines of weakness are more prone to chemical weathering than thesurrounding limestone. The limestone is dissolved over time by rainwater(weak carbonic acid) leaving deep gaps (grykes) and intervening blocks(clints). continued weathering (both physical and chemical) will further deepen andwiden the grykes.

    Assess out of 6.Max 2 marks for describing features if no explanation given. 6 marks

  • Swallow Holes and Pot HolesBecause limestone is a permeable rock, there are few surface streams.

    Streams that flow onto limestone quickly fall into one of the many enlarged joints on the surface and disappear underground.

    Where a river goes underground it is called a swallow hole or a pot hole.

  • The stream disappears into the groundSwallow holes and pot holes

  • Limestone features

  • Swallow Hole

  • Limestone features

  • CavernsCaverns form where some of the underground limestone is dissolved more quickly than the rock around it. This happens when the rock has many joints and bedding planes close together.

    These cracks allow through lots of water, which dissolves away the rock completely and a cavern forms.

  • Limestone features

  • StalactitesForm in the following way:The water that drips into the cavern is laced with calcium carbonate that has dissolved on its passage through the rock.

    The water drips from the cavern roof very slowly and some of it evaporates leaving behind calcite deposited on the cavern roof.

    The water continues to drip, evaporating as it does so, and the deposits build up to form fingers of calcite that grow downwards into the cavern.

  • Stalactites They grow by only a few millimetres a year.

    They grow slowly, partly because the water cannot hold much dissolved limestone and partly because the caverns are cool and not much evaporation takes place.

  • StalagmitesSome of the water drips onto the cavern floor where it may also evaporate.

    It leaves behind calcite here as well, which is deposited on the cavern floor.

    As more water drips down, more is deposited forming fingers of dripstone that grow upwards from the cavern floor.

    These are called Stalagmites.

  • Sometimes stalagmites and stalactites join together to form a limestone pillar.Stalagmites

  • Caves of Drach

  • Limestone gorge

  • Stalactite revision

  • Limestone landscapes

  • Limestone landscapes

  • Carboniferous limestone features

  • Key ideas

  • Alkali Any substance which, when dissolved in water, has a pH greater than 7. Acid Any substance which, when dissolved in water, has a pH less than 7. The opposite of an alkali.Calcium carbonate The chemical composition of limestone.Carboniferous limestone A type of limestone normally occurring in thick beds, formed in the carboniferous period.Chemical solution The process of weathering in which limestone rock is dissolved by acidic rain.Chemical weathering The process by which rocks are decomposed, dissolved or loosened by chemical means.Glossary

  • Clints Solid blocks of rock that make up limestone pavements.Grykes The cracks between the clints in limestone pavement, formed by chemical solution.Limestone A sedimentary rock, formed by deposits of marine creatures.Limestone pavement A surface area of limestone weathered in such a way as to form clints and grykes.Weathering The natural decomposition of rocks into smaller particles over time.Yorkshire Dales An area in North West Yorkshire, where the underlying rock is principally carboniferous limestone.Glossary

    **Photo Credit: (intermittent drainage) Cris Matei Photo Credit: (swallow hole) Geography Department of Kettlethorpe High School 2006Geography Department of Kettlethorpe High School.Photo Credit: (stalactites) Adam Ciesielski Photo Credit: (Cheddar Gorge) Sam Segar Photo Credit: (limestone pavement) Jonathan Ogilvie Photo Credit: (cavern) Jenny So*Limestone Pavement at the top of Malham Cove. Photo Credit: Ollie Bray**Photo Credit: Image courtesy of Geography Department of Kettlethorpe High School 2006Geography Department of Kettlethorpe High School **