Ooids are small (=2 mm in diameter), spheroidal, "coated" (layered)
sedimentary grains, usually composed of
calcium carbonate, but sometimes made up of
iron- or
phosphate-based minerals. Ooids usually form on the
sea floor, most commonly in shallow tropical seas (around the
Bahamas, for example, or in the
Persian Gulf). After being buried under additional
sediment, these
ooid grains can be cemented together to form a
sedimentary rock called an
oolite. Oolites usually consist of calcium carbonate; these belong to the
limestone rock family.
Pisoids are similar to ooids, but are larger than 2 mm in diameter, often considerably larger, as with the pisoids in the hot springs at Carlsbad (
Karlovy Vary) in the
Czech Republic.