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Sedimentology,
Sedimentary Petrology, and Stratigraphy explore the interaction of sediments
and sedimentary and volcaniclastic rocks with the biosphere, hydrosphere,
atmosphere, cryosphere, and crust of the earth.
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Sedimentology involves the description, classification, modeling,
and interpretation of marine and nonmarine sediments so as to determine
the physical, chemical, and biological processes by which they formed.
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Sedimentary
petrology studies the mineralogical and geochemical composition of
sediments and sedimentary rocks to determine depositional and post-depostitional
processes of formation.
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Stratigraphy
uses physical, geophysical, paleontological, and geochemical techniques
to describe the natural subdivisions of sedimentary and volcanic strata,
their distribution, their chronological succession, and the structure
and history of the crust.
The
study of sediments and sedimentary rocks is societally relevant because
they host most of the world's metallic, non-metallic, fuel, and agricultural
resources, record the origin and evolution of life, and are the major
substrate of environmental geology.
Faculty Members:
Jody
Bourgeois
Roger
Buick
Eric
Cheney
Chuck
Nittrouer
Jeff
Parsons
Richard
Stewart
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