Carbonate sediments are rocks made from tiny pieces of shells, bones, and other stuff that living things leave behind.
Imagine you're playing in a sandbox, and every time you dig, you find little bits of shells or pebbles. Over many years, those little bits pile up and stick together, just like how sand becomes a beach. That's what happens with carbonate sediments!
How they are made
Carbonate sediments come from tiny sea creatures like clams, corals, and plankton. These creatures build shells or skeletons made of calcium carbonate, which is a type of rock.
When these creatures die, their shells and bones fall to the bottom of the ocean. Over time, more and more layers pile on top, kind of like stacking cookies in a jar. Eventually, all those little pieces turn into solid rock.
A real example
Think of a beach where seashells wash up every day. If you could press all those shells together with the help of water and time, they’d form something like limestone, which is a type of carbonate sediment!
So next time you pick up a pretty shell on the beach, remember: it might one day be part of a big rock under your feet!
Examples
- A beach made of tiny shells turning into a rock over millions of years.
- Fish bones forming layers under the sea.
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See also
- What is deposited?
- How Does Sedimentary Rocks Work?
- What is limestone?
- What is Red rock?
- What is goethite?