Science, Tech, Math › Science A Gallery of Concretions Share Flipboard Email Print Federica Grassi / Getty Images Science Geology Types Of Rocks Landforms and Geologic Features Plate Tectonics Chemistry Biology Physics Astronomy Weather & Climate By Andrew Alden Andrew Alden Geology Expert B.A., Earth Sciences, University of New Hampshire Andrew Alden is a geologist based in Oakland, California. He works as a research guide for the U.S. Geological Survey. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on August 24, 2017 01 of 24 Ferruginous Gravel, Australia Gallery of Concretions. Courtesy Robert van de Graaff, Van de Graaff & Associates, all rights reserved Concretions are hard bodies that form in sediments before they become sedimentary rocks. Slow chemical changes, perhaps related to microbial activity, cause minerals to come out of the groundwater and seal the sediment together. Most often the cementing mineral is calcite, but the brown, iron-bearing carbonate mineral siderite is also common. Some concretions have a central particle, such as a fossil, that triggered the cementation. Others have a void, perhaps where a central object dissolved away, and others have nothing special inside, maybe because the cementation was imposed from outside. A concretion consists of the same material as the rock around it, plus the cementing mineral, whereas a nodule (like flint nodules in limestone) is composed of different material. Concretions can be shaped like cylinders, sheets, nearly perfect spheres, and everything in between. Most are spherical. In size, they can range from as small as gravel to as large as a truck. This gallery shows concretions that range in size from small to large. These gravel-size concretions of iron-bearing (ferruginous) material are from Sugarloaf Reservoir Park, Victoria, Australia. 02 of 24 Root-Cast Concretion, California Gallery of Concretions. Photo (c) 2008 Andrew Alden, licensed to About.com ( fair use policy) This small cylindrical concretion formed around the trace of a plant root in shale of Miocene age from Sonoma County, California. 03 of 24 Concretions from Louisiana Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Glen Carlson, all rights reserved Concretions from Cenozoic rocks of the Claiborne Group of Louisiana and Arkansas. The iron cement includes the amorphous oxide mixture limonite. 04 of 24 Mushroom Shaped Concretion, Topeka, Kansas Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy bueuwe from the Geology Forum; all rights reserved This concretion appears to owe its mushroom shape from a short period of erosion after it broke in half, exposing its core. Concretions may be quite fragile. 05 of 24 Conglomeratic Concretion Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Glen Carlson, all rights reserved Concretions in beds of conglomeratic sediment (sediment containing gravel or cobbles) look like a conglomerate, but they may be in loose lithified surroundings. 06 of 24 Concretion from South Africa Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Linda Redfern; all rights reserved Concretions are universal, yet every one is different, especially when they depart from spheroid forms. 07 of 24 Bone-Shaped Concretion Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Linda Redfern; all rights reserved Concretions often assume organic shapes, which catch people's eyes. Early geological thinkers had to learn to differentiate them from genuine fossils. 08 of 24 Tubular Concretions, Wyoming Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Matt Affolter, all rights reserved This concretion in Flaming Gorge may have arisen from a root, a burrow or a bone -- or something else. 09 of 24 Ironstone Concretion, Iowa Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Henry Klatt, all rights reserved The curvilinear shapes of concretions are suggestive of organic remains or fossils. This photo was posted in the Geology Forum. 10 of 24 Concretion, Genessee Shale, New York Gallery of Concretions. Courtesy Virginia Peterson, all rights reserved Concretion from the Genesee Shale, of Devonian age, in the Letchworth State Park museum, New York. This appears to have grown as a soft mineral gel. 11 of 24 Concretion in Claystone, California Gallery of Concretions. Photo (c) 2008 Andrew Alden, licensed to About.com ( fair use policy) Interior of a pod-shaped ferruginous concretion that formed in shale of Eocene age in Oakland, California. 12 of 24 Concretions in Shale, New York Gallery of Concretions. Courtesy Virginia Peterson, all rights reserved Concretions from the Marcellus Shale near Bethany, New York. The bumps on the right-hand one are fossil shells; planes on the left-hand one are fissure fillings. 13 of 24 Concretion Cross Section, Iran Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Mohammad Reza Izadkhah, all rights reserved This concretion from the Gorgan region of Iran displays its inner layers in cross section. The upper flat surface may be a bedding plane of the shale host rock. 14 of 24 Pennsylvania Concretion Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Vincent Schiffbauer; all rights reserved Many people are convinced that their concretion is a dinosaur egg or similar fossil, but no egg in the world has ever been as large as this specimen. 15 of 24 Ironstone Concretions, England Gallery of Concretions. Courtesy Stuart Swann, North East Yorkshire Geology Trust, all rights reserved Large, irregular concretions in the Scalby Formation (Middle Jurassic age) at Burniston Bay near Scarborough, U.K. The knife handle is 8 centimeters long. 16 of 24 Concretion with Crossbedding, Montana Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Ken Turnbull, Denver, Colorado. These Montana concretions eroded from the sand beds behind them. Crossbedding from the sand is now preserved in the rocks. 17 of 24 Concretion Hoodoo, Montana Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Ken Turnbull, Denver, Colorado This large concretion in Montana has protected the softer material beneath it from erosion, resulting in a classic hoodoo. 18 of 24 Concretions, Scotland Gallery of Concretions. Graeme Churchard of Flickr.com reproduced under Creative Commons license Large ironstone (ferruginous) concretions in Jurassic rocks of Laig Bay in Isle of Eigg, Scotland. 19 of 24 Bowling Ball Beach, California Gallery of Concretions. Chris de Rham of Flickr.com reproduced under Creative Commons license This locality is near Point Arena, part of Schooner Gulch State Beach. Concretions weather out of steeply tilted mudstone of Cenozoic age. 20 of 24 Concretions at Bowling Ball Beach Gallery of Concretions. Courtesy Terry Wright, all rights reserved Concretions at Bowling Ball Beach erode out of their sedimentary matrix. 21 of 24 Moeraki Boulder Concretions Gallery of Concretions. David Briody of Flickr.com reproduced under Creative Commons license Large spherical concretions erode from mudstone cliffs at Moeraki, on New Zealand's South Island. These grew soon after the sediment was deposited. 22 of 24 Eroded Concretions at Moeraki, New Zealand Gallery of Concretions. Gemma Longman of Flickr.com reproduced under Creative Commons license The outer part of the Moeraki boulders erodes to reveal the inner septarian veins of calcite, which grew outward from a hollow core. 23 of 24 Broken Concretion at Moeraki Gallery of Concretions. Aenneken of Flickr.com reproduced under Creative Commons license This large fragment reveals the inner structure of the septarian concretions at Moeraki, New Zealand. This site is a scientific reserve. 24 of 24 Giant Concretions in Alberta, Canada Gallery of Concretions. Photo courtesy Darcy Zelman, Grand Rapids Wilderness Adventures, all rights reserved The Grand Rapids in remote northern Alberta may have the world's largest concretions. They create white water rapids in the Athabasca River. Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Alden, Andrew. "A Gallery of Concretions." ThoughtCo, Aug. 27, 2020, thoughtco.com/gallery-of-concretions-4122853. Alden, Andrew. (2020, August 27). A Gallery of Concretions. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/gallery-of-concretions-4122853 Alden, Andrew. "A Gallery of Concretions." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/gallery-of-concretions-4122853 (accessed June 10, 2023). copy citation