Cantclimbtom
Active member
Hello geologists, geotechnical and mining surveyors people
Please may I ask a question about chalk and marl, yes... I have tried Googling it, but for some reason (perhaps my ignorantly formed searches) I'm not getting back what I want. I already understand that chalk is composed of the remains of sea creatures/shell/etc and probably contains clays. I also already understand that marl is precipitated carbonate form a great lake or drying inland sea and that it is more sand/silica (less clay).
But if you are out in the field and someone just handed you a lump of chalky white white rock to identify, is there a test you can do like scraping with a knife blade or running on sandpaper etc to distinguish a chalk from a marl, or are there any other clues such as flint inclusions indicates one rather than the other?
Thanks in advance!
Edit: or any other geological clues/indicators like if is underlying chalk or underlying consolidated sand/sandstone etc
Please may I ask a question about chalk and marl, yes... I have tried Googling it, but for some reason (perhaps my ignorantly formed searches) I'm not getting back what I want. I already understand that chalk is composed of the remains of sea creatures/shell/etc and probably contains clays. I also already understand that marl is precipitated carbonate form a great lake or drying inland sea and that it is more sand/silica (less clay).
But if you are out in the field and someone just handed you a lump of chalky white white rock to identify, is there a test you can do like scraping with a knife blade or running on sandpaper etc to distinguish a chalk from a marl, or are there any other clues such as flint inclusions indicates one rather than the other?
Thanks in advance!
Edit: or any other geological clues/indicators like if is underlying chalk or underlying consolidated sand/sandstone etc