Article
Article
- Earth Science
- Geology and geodesy
- Redbeds
Redbeds
Article By:
Van Houten, Franklyn B. Department of Geology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey.
Last reviewed:December 2019
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1036/1097-8542.576400
- Source areas
- Mode of deposition
- Tectonics and continental drift
- Related Primary Literature
- Additional Reading
Clastic sediments and sedimentary rocks that are pigmented by red ferric oxide which coats grains, fills pores as cement, or is dispersed as a muddy matrix. These conspicuously colored rocks commonly constitute thick sequences of nonmarine, paralic (marginal marine) and less commonly shallow marine deposits. Clastic redbeds accumulated in many parts of the globe during the past 109 years of Earth history. They were among the first sedimentary deposits to be considered climatic indicators, because their color was assumed to reflect a unique, identifiable condition of deposition. On the contrary, development of red pigment in most redbeds was complex and is difficult to decipher in detail. Ferric oxides also pigment marine chert, limestone and cherty iron formations and ooidal ironstones, but these chemical deposits are not usually included among redbeds.
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