Daniel F. Cupertino, Camila Wense Ramnani, Michael D. Vanden Berg, Stanley M. Awramik
{"title":"犹他州Sanpete县始新世绿河组湖相含微生物岩碳酸盐矿床中镁粘土的形成","authors":"Daniel F. Cupertino, Camila Wense Ramnani, Michael D. Vanden Berg, Stanley M. Awramik","doi":"10.1111/sed.13136","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT Authigenic magnesium‐clays have been observed and documented in the Green River Formation, specifically as ooidal stevensite grains. Magnesian clays are a valuable proxy for reconstructing shallow‐water, saline‐alkaline lake palaeoenvironments due to their responses to chemical changes. Magnesium‐rich clay minerals are relatively common components in modern and ancient lake systems. A rare interaction of lacustrine magnesian clays, microbialites, carbonates and volcanoclastic deposits of the Eocene Green River Formation crop out in Sanpete Valley, Utah, USA. The characterization of this interaction, Mg‐rich clay and carbonate minerals genesis, the environmental controls on Mg‐rich clay minerals distribution and accumulation is still poorly understood. This study has identified various species of Mg‐clay minerals (stevensite, mixed‐layer kerolite‐stevensite, and sepiolite), along with calcite and dolomite, found in four Mg‐clay‐bearing lithofacies: (i) Mg‐clay stromatolites; (ii) Mg‐clay arenites; (iii) Mg‐claystone; and (iv) intraclastic Mg‐clay hybrid arenites and conglomerates. Magnesium‐clay bearing rocks from the Sanpete Valley area were deposited in a south‐western, shallow embayment of Eocene Lake Uinta along the margin of the Sevier fold and thrust belt. Sanpete Valley´s Mg‐clay‐bearing section shows syngenetic mineralogical paragenesis with neoformation of magnesian clays accompanied by calcite and silica. Regional chronostratigraphic correlation of Sanpete Valley´s Mg‐clay‐bearing section with the Uinta Basin was made by zircon U–Pb dating (laser ablation – inductively coupled plasma – mass spectrometry) of two tuff beds. Stevensite and kerolite are precipitated under very specific conditions. This study presents a depositional model, considering evidence from the authigenic mineralogy, facies, fossil evidence, and basin context. All these findings allow a comprehensive analysis of the lithostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic evolution of this isolated bay system, as well as texture classification. This study provides analogue for detailed correlation and comparison to other basins containing similar Mg‐clay and microbialite‐bearing deposits.","PeriodicalId":21838,"journal":{"name":"Sedimentology","volume":"08 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Formation of magnesium‐clay in a lacustrine microbialite‐bearing carbonate deposit, Eocene Green River Formation, Sanpete County, Utah\",\"authors\":\"Daniel F. Cupertino, Camila Wense Ramnani, Michael D. Vanden Berg, Stanley M. Awramik\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/sed.13136\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACT Authigenic magnesium‐clays have been observed and documented in the Green River Formation, specifically as ooidal stevensite grains. Magnesian clays are a valuable proxy for reconstructing shallow‐water, saline‐alkaline lake palaeoenvironments due to their responses to chemical changes. Magnesium‐rich clay minerals are relatively common components in modern and ancient lake systems. A rare interaction of lacustrine magnesian clays, microbialites, carbonates and volcanoclastic deposits of the Eocene Green River Formation crop out in Sanpete Valley, Utah, USA. The characterization of this interaction, Mg‐rich clay and carbonate minerals genesis, the environmental controls on Mg‐rich clay minerals distribution and accumulation is still poorly understood. This study has identified various species of Mg‐clay minerals (stevensite, mixed‐layer kerolite‐stevensite, and sepiolite), along with calcite and dolomite, found in four Mg‐clay‐bearing lithofacies: (i) Mg‐clay stromatolites; (ii) Mg‐clay arenites; (iii) Mg‐claystone; and (iv) intraclastic Mg‐clay hybrid arenites and conglomerates. Magnesium‐clay bearing rocks from the Sanpete Valley area were deposited in a south‐western, shallow embayment of Eocene Lake Uinta along the margin of the Sevier fold and thrust belt. Sanpete Valley´s Mg‐clay‐bearing section shows syngenetic mineralogical paragenesis with neoformation of magnesian clays accompanied by calcite and silica. Regional chronostratigraphic correlation of Sanpete Valley´s Mg‐clay‐bearing section with the Uinta Basin was made by zircon U–Pb dating (laser ablation – inductively coupled plasma – mass spectrometry) of two tuff beds. Stevensite and kerolite are precipitated under very specific conditions. This study presents a depositional model, considering evidence from the authigenic mineralogy, facies, fossil evidence, and basin context. All these findings allow a comprehensive analysis of the lithostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic evolution of this isolated bay system, as well as texture classification. 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Formation of magnesium‐clay in a lacustrine microbialite‐bearing carbonate deposit, Eocene Green River Formation, Sanpete County, Utah
ABSTRACT Authigenic magnesium‐clays have been observed and documented in the Green River Formation, specifically as ooidal stevensite grains. Magnesian clays are a valuable proxy for reconstructing shallow‐water, saline‐alkaline lake palaeoenvironments due to their responses to chemical changes. Magnesium‐rich clay minerals are relatively common components in modern and ancient lake systems. A rare interaction of lacustrine magnesian clays, microbialites, carbonates and volcanoclastic deposits of the Eocene Green River Formation crop out in Sanpete Valley, Utah, USA. The characterization of this interaction, Mg‐rich clay and carbonate minerals genesis, the environmental controls on Mg‐rich clay minerals distribution and accumulation is still poorly understood. This study has identified various species of Mg‐clay minerals (stevensite, mixed‐layer kerolite‐stevensite, and sepiolite), along with calcite and dolomite, found in four Mg‐clay‐bearing lithofacies: (i) Mg‐clay stromatolites; (ii) Mg‐clay arenites; (iii) Mg‐claystone; and (iv) intraclastic Mg‐clay hybrid arenites and conglomerates. Magnesium‐clay bearing rocks from the Sanpete Valley area were deposited in a south‐western, shallow embayment of Eocene Lake Uinta along the margin of the Sevier fold and thrust belt. Sanpete Valley´s Mg‐clay‐bearing section shows syngenetic mineralogical paragenesis with neoformation of magnesian clays accompanied by calcite and silica. Regional chronostratigraphic correlation of Sanpete Valley´s Mg‐clay‐bearing section with the Uinta Basin was made by zircon U–Pb dating (laser ablation – inductively coupled plasma – mass spectrometry) of two tuff beds. Stevensite and kerolite are precipitated under very specific conditions. This study presents a depositional model, considering evidence from the authigenic mineralogy, facies, fossil evidence, and basin context. All these findings allow a comprehensive analysis of the lithostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic evolution of this isolated bay system, as well as texture classification. This study provides analogue for detailed correlation and comparison to other basins containing similar Mg‐clay and microbialite‐bearing deposits.
期刊介绍:
The international leader in its field, Sedimentology publishes ground-breaking research from across the spectrum of sedimentology, sedimentary geology and sedimentary geochemistry.
Areas covered include: experimental and theoretical grain transport; sediment fluxes; modern and ancient sedimentary environments; sequence stratigraphy sediment-organism interaction; palaeosoils; diagenesis; stable isotope geochemistry; environmental sedimentology