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- Rudite abstract "Rudite is a general name used for a sedimentary rocks that are composed of rounded or angular detrital grains, i.e. granules, pebbles, cobbles, and boulders, which are coarser than sand in size. Rudites include sedimentary rocks composed of both siliciclastic, i.e. conglomerate and breccia, and carbonate grains, i.e. calcirudite and rudstone. This term is equivalent to the Greek-derived term, psephite. Rudite was initially proposed by Grabau as "rudyte." It is derived from the Latin word, "rudus," for "crushed stone," "rubbish," "debris," and "rubble."Rudites can be deposited in a variety of nonmarine and marine environments. In nonmarine settings, gravels, which later were lithified to become rudites, accumulated within fluvial channels, within alluvial fans, and as glacial deposits. In marine environments, rudites were deposited along shorelines as part of beaches, as basal conglomerates during marine transgressions, and in the deep sea by slumps and turbidites. Rudites composed largely of rounded siliciclastic gravel are conglomerates and others composed of angular siliciclastic gravel are breccias.Pettijohn gives the following descriptive terms based on grain size, avoiding the use of terms such as clay or argillaceous which carry an implication of chemical composition. The Greek terms are more commonly used for metamorphosed rocks, and the Latin for unmetamorphosed:".
- Rudite wikiPageID "14979654".
- Rudite wikiPageLength "2713".
- Rudite wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- Rudite wikiPageRevisionID "541467209".
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Arenite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Argillite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Beach.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Boulder.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Breccia.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Calcirudite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Carbonate_rock.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sedimentary_rocks.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Clay.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Cobble_(geology).
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Conglomerate_(geology).
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Detritus.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Grain_size.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Granule_(geology).
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Lutite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Marine_transgression.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Particle_size_(grain_size).
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Pebble.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Pelite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Psammite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Psephite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Sand.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Sedimentary_rock.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Shore.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Shoreline.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Siliciclastic.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLink Turbidite.
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudaceous".
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudite".
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLinkText "large clasts".
- Rudite wikiPageWikiLinkText "rudite".
- Rudite hasPhotoCollection Rudite.
- Rudite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Rudite subject Category:Sedimentary_rocks.
- Rudite hypernym Name.
- Rudite comment "Rudite is a general name used for a sedimentary rocks that are composed of rounded or angular detrital grains, i.e. granules, pebbles, cobbles, and boulders, which are coarser than sand in size. Rudites include sedimentary rocks composed of both siliciclastic, i.e. conglomerate and breccia, and carbonate grains, i.e. calcirudite and rudstone. This term is equivalent to the Greek-derived term, psephite.".
- Rudite label "Rudite".
- Rudite sameAs Rudit.
- Rudite sameAs Rudite.
- Rudite sameAs Ruditi.
- Rudite sameAs m.03h3ktf.
- Rudite sameAs Rudit.
- Rudite sameAs Q1515180.
- Rudite sameAs Q1515180.
- Rudite wasDerivedFrom Rudite?oldid=541467209.
- Rudite isPrimaryTopicOf Rudite.