scholarly journals Discovery of halloysite books in altered silicic Quaternary tephras, northern New Zealand

Clay Minerals ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 351-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.J. Cunningham ◽  
D.J. Lowe ◽  
J.B. Wyatt ◽  
V.G. Moon ◽  
G. Jock Churchman

AbstractHydrated halloysite was discovered in books, a morphology previously associated exclusively with kaolinite. From ∼1.5 to ∼1500 μm in length, the books showed significantly greater mean Fe contents (Fe2O3= 5.2 wt.%) than tubes (Fe2O3= 3.2 wt.%), and expanded rapidly with formamide. They occurred, along with halloysite tubes, spheroids and plates, in highly porous yet poorly permeable, silt-dominated, Si-rich, pumiceous rhyolitic tephra deposits aged ∼0.93 Ma (Te Puna tephra) and ∼0.27 Ma (Te Ranga tephra) at three sites ∼10–20 m stratigraphically below the modern landsurface in the Tauranga area, eastern North Island, New Zealand. The book-bearing tephras were at or near saturation, but have experienced intermittent partial drying, favouring the proposed changes: solubilized volcanic glass + plagioclase→halloysite spheroids→halloysite tubes→halloysite plates→ halloysite books. Unlike parallel studies elsewhere involving both halloysite and kaolinite, kaolinite has not formed in Tauranga presumably because the low permeability ensures that the sites largely remain locally wet so that the halloysite books are metastable. An implication of the discovery is that some halloysite books in similar settings may have been misidentified previously as kaolinite.

2003 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 262-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phil Shane ◽  
Victoria Smith ◽  
Ian Nairn

AbstractStratigraphically important Quaternary rhyolitic tephra deposits that erupted from the Okataina and Taupo volcanic centers in New Zealand can be geochemically identified using the FeO and MgO contents of their biotite phenocrysts. The FeO/MgO ratio in biotite does not correlate with FeO/MgO in the coexisting glass phase so that tephra beds with similar glass compositions can be discriminated by their different biotite compositions. Some individual tephra deposits display sequential changes in biotite composition that allow separate phases of the eruption to be identified, greatly increasing the potential precision for correlation. In addition, devitrified lavas that are unsuitable for glass analysis can be correlated to coeval tephra deposits by their biotite compositions. Biotite is common in high-K2O (>4 wt%) tephra beds and is widely dispersed in ash plumes because of its platy form, thus making it important in correlation studies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenni L. Hopkins ◽  
Janine E. Bidmead ◽  
David J. Lowe ◽  
Richard J. Wysoczanski ◽  
Bradley J. Pillans ◽  
...  

Abstract. Although analyses of tephra-derived glass shards have been undertaken in New Zealand for nearly four decades (pioneered by Paul Froggatt), our study is the first to systematically develop a formal, comprehensive, open access, reference dataset of glass-shard compositions for New Zealand tephras. These data will provide an important reference tool for future studies to identify and correlate tephra deposits and for associated petrological and magma-related studies within New Zealand and beyond. Here we present the foundation dataset for TephraNZ, an open access reference dataset for selected tephra deposits in New Zealand. Prominent, rhyolitic, tephra deposits from the Quaternary were identified, with sample collection targeting original type sites or reference locations where the tephra's identification is unequivocally known based on independent dating or mineralogical techniques. Glass shards were extracted from the tephra deposits and major and trace element geochemical compositions were determined. We discuss in detail the data reduction process used to obtain the results and propose that future studies follow a similar protocol in order to gain comparable data. The dataset contains analyses of twenty-three proximal and twenty-seven distal tephra samples characterising 45 eruptive episodes ranging from Kaharoa (636 ± 12 cal. yrs BP) to the Hikuroa Pumice member (2.0 ± 0.6 Ma) from six or more caldera sources, most from the central Taupō Volcanic Zone. We report 1385 major element analyses obtained by electron microprobe (EMPA), and 590 trace element analyses obtained by laser ablation (LA)-ICP-MS, on individual glass shards. Using PCA, Euclidean similarity coefficients, and geochemical investigation, we show that chemical compositions of glass shards from individual eruptions are commonly distinguished by major elements, especially CaO, TiO2, K2O, FeOt (Na2O+ K2O and SiO2/K2O), but not always. For those tephras with similar glass major-element signatures, some can be distinguished using trace elements (e.g. HFSEs: Zr, Hf, Nb; LILE: Ba, Rb; REE: Eu, Tm, Dy, Y, Tb, Gd, Er, Ho, Yb, Sm), and trace element ratios (e.g. LILE / HFSE: Ba / Th, Ba / Zr, Rb / Zr; HFSE / HREE: Zr / Y, Zr / Yb, Hf / Y; LREE / HREE: La / Yb, Ce / Yb). Geochemistry alone cannot be used to distinguish between glass shards from the following tephra groups: Taupō (Unit Y in the post-Ōruanui eruption sequence of Taupō volcano) and Waimihia (Unit S); Poronui (Unit C) and Karapiti (Unit B); Rotorua and Rerewhakaaitu; and Kawakawa/Ōruanui, Okaia, and Unit L (of the Mangaone subgroup eruption sequence). Other characteristics can be used to separate and distinguish all of these otherwise-similar eruptives except Poronui and Karapiti. Bimodality caused by K2O variability is newly identified in Poihipi and Tahuna tephras. Using glass shard compositions, tephra sourced from Taupō Volcanic Centre (TVC) and Mangakino Volcanic Centre (MgVC) can be separated using bivariate plots of SiO2/K2O vs. Na2O+K2O. Glass shards from tephras derived from Kapenga Volcanic Centre, Rotorua Volcanic Centre, and Whakamaru Volcanic Centre have similar major- and trace-element chemical compositions to those from the MgVC, but can overlap with glass analyses from tephras from Taupō and Okataina volcanic centres. Specific trace elements and trace element ratios have lower variability than the heterogeneous major element and bimodal signatures, making them easier to geochemically fingerprint.


Clay Minerals ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Kirkman ◽  
W. J. McHardy

AbstractThe morphology of volcanic glass particles in rhyolitic and andesitic tephra of central North Island and Taranaki areas of New Zealand has been studied by scanning electron microscopy. Electron probe analyses of the glasses are compared with those of the clays to which they weather. Loss of silica characterizes the weathering of both glasses. The rapid rate of weathering of andesitic glass is attributed to its occurrence as fine, soft microlites and extensive substitution of Al for Si in the structure. Rhyolitic glass weathers more slowly because it occurs as hard and brittle particles containing relatively little alumina. It is suggested that the structure, chemical composition and chemical activity of allophane is governed largely by the chemical composition and bonding characteristics of the parent glass.


Clay Minerals ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 313-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. P. W. Hodder ◽  
B. E. Green ◽  
D. J. Lowe

AbstractThe kinetics of clay formation in buried paleosols developed from late Quaternary rhyolitic tephra layers near Rotorua, New Zealand, can be described in terms of a combination of parabolic and linear kinetics, reflecting the hydration of glass, and the formation of clay minerals, respectively. Such a model is consistent with the formation of clay minerals showing an Arrhenian temperature dependence and suggests, on the basis of calculated activation energies, that the process of formation of Al-rich allophane (imogolite) is diffusion controlled, whereas the rate of formation of Si-rich allophane is controlled by the chemical processes at the site of reaction.


Soil Research ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
JH Kirkman ◽  
WA Pullar

Investigation of the clay mineralogy of 14 rhyolitic tephra beds with a suggested age of 125000 to 220000 years revealed that the squat cylindrical form of halloysite is the dominant crystalline mineral. This mineral has probably crystallized from allophane over a long time period, excess silica being precipitated as a weakly hydrated phase. The squat cylindrical crystals perhaps characterize halloysite formation in rhyolitic tephras.


2005 ◽  
Vol 85 (5) ◽  
pp. 637-648 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Strickland ◽  
J. M. Arocena ◽  
P. Sanborn ◽  
C. A. S. Smith

Selected surface horizons of grassland and forest soils formed under a cold, semi-arid climate were investigated to evaluate the formation of secondary minerals within the White River tephra, a Late Holocene rhyolitic tephra (~115014C yr BP) veneer that overlies the soil landscapes of central Yukon. Concentrations of extractable Fe (< 0.48%), Al (< 0.26%) and Si (< 0.082%) concentrations in surface tephra-contaning horizons of grassland and forest pedons are low. The high amount of exchangeable calcium in grassland soils is likely due to cycling by vegetation and perhaps, aeolian inputs of Ca and Mg carbonates. Al is incorporated into Al-humus complexes in forest pedons and allophane in grassland pedons. Allophane content is low (< 0.56%) in all soils as is ferrihydrite (< 0.34%). Mineral composition of the sand fraction from tephra horizons is dominated by volcanic glass, plagioclase feldspars, amphiboles, epidote, pyroxenes and very limited quantities of quartz and primary Fe oxides. Chlorite and an expanding phyllosilicate were also detected and are assumed to be of detrital origin. Clay mineralogy is dominated by volcanic glass, quartz, feldspars and minimal quantities of kaolinite and dehydrated halloysite in surficial horizons. Kaolinite is assumed to be of detrital origin while dehydrated halloysite is a product of a low leaching and dry environment where limited resilication occurs. Scanning electronmicroscopy (SEM) investigation indicates the presence of opaline silica in surface horizons from forest pedons which has likely formed due to freezing of the soil solution in combination with dehydration and resilication. Overall, the soil horizons formed within the veneer of White River tephra have experienced minimal weathering and very little silicate clay mineral development. Key words: Tephra, glass, Yukon, minerals (secondary), weathering


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