Zeolitic diagenesis of Oligocene pyroclastic rocks of the Metaxades area, Thrace, Greece

1990 ◽  
Vol 54 (374) ◽  
pp. 95-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Tsolis-Katagas ◽  
C. Katagas

AbstractThe unstable glassy component of the Oligocene tuffaceous sediments of the Metaxades area, Thrace, Greece, has undergone extensive zeolitic diagenetic alteration. The authigenic minerals occur as crypto- to micro-crystalline aggregates making up most of the matrix in the altered tuffs and as precipitates in cavities produced by dissolved glass fragments. Glass-shard pseudomorphs are ubiquitous and most of them are partly filled by one or more of the minerals smectite, heulandite, mordenite and silica.The heulandite group zeolites are mostly high-silica calcium-rich heulandites showing intermediate thermal behaviour between most heulandites and clinoptilolites. Their Si/Al ratios are similar to clinoptilolite (4.74–5.19) but their divalent/monovalent cation ratios (1.5–3.24) are partly superposed onto the ratios of heulandite group 1 and 2 and differ considerably from the values of the relevant ratio in clinoptilolite. Rare K-rich clinoptilolite crystals have been identified in one sample only.Based on field observations, compositions and paragenetic relationships of coexisting authigenic minerals and the absence of critical phases such as laumontite, analcime or authigenic albite, it is suggested that the Metaxades pyroclastic rocks underwent burial diagenesis intermediate between Iijima's (1978) zones II and III commonly developed in silica saturated environments.

Clay Minerals ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 557-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Esenli ◽  
A. Sirkecioğlu

AbstractDiagenetic alteration in two tuff horizons (the lower and upper tuff units) in the GoÈrdes region of Turkey led to the formation of mainly heulandite-clinoptilolite-type zeolites and also clay and silica minerals and K-feldspar. Possible variations in the climate and geological environment followed by variations in the hydrological system and the composition of the Miocene lake water and groundwater at that time resulted in the mineralogical facies. The lower tuffs are unaltered or slightly altered in the northern part and are more altered, particularly to zeolite (clinoptilolite) in the southern part of the study area. Heulandite and K-feldspar are mainly authigenic minerals in the upper tuff unit. The ammonium-exchange capacities of the 16 samples were investigated to understand the effects of the mineralogical composition on their ion-exchange capacities, which vary in the range 0.19-2.00 mEq/g. It is observed that the ion-exchange capacities are strongly dependent on the zeolite contents of the rocks. The correlation coefficient of this linear relation is 0.86. The most significant increase in ammonium-exchange capacity (from 0.2 to ~1.0 mEq/g) was observed when the zeolite contents increased from 0 to 30 wt.%. The second increase in exchange capacity was observed for samples containing >80 wt.% zeolite. Although there is no significant effect from the other authigenic minerals, smectite has a positive effect, and K-feldspar and opal-CT have almost no effect on the ion exchange capacities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 91 (9) ◽  
pp. 945-968
Author(s):  
Karen E. Higgs ◽  
Stuart Munday ◽  
Anne Forbes ◽  
Karsten F. Kroeger

ABSTRACT Paleocene sandstones in the Kupe Field of Taranaki Basin, New Zealand, are subdivided into two diagenetic zones, an upper kaolinite–siderite (K-S) zone and a lower chlorite–smectite (Ch-Sm) zone. Petrographic observations show that the K-S zone has formed from diagenetic alteration of earlier-formed Ch-Sm sandstones, whereby biotite and chlorite–smectite have been altered to form kaolinite and siderite, and plagioclase has reacted to form kaolinite and quartz. These diagenetic zones can be difficult to discriminate from downhole bulk-rock geochemistry, which is largely due to a change in element-mineral affinities without a wholesale change in element abundance. However, some elements have proven useful for delimiting the diagenetic zones, particularly Ca and Na, where much lower abundances in the K-S zone are interpreted to represent removal of labile elements during diagenesis. Multivariate analysis has also proven an effective method of distinguishing the diagenetic zones by highlighting elemental affinities that are interpreted to represent the principal diagenetic phases. These include Fe-Mg-Mn (siderite) in the K-S zone, and Ca-Mn (calcite) and Fe-Mg-Ti-Y-Sc-V (biotite and chlorite–smectite) in the Ch-Sm zone. Results from this study demonstrate that the base of the K-S zone approximately corresponds to the base of the current hydrocarbon column. An assessment with 1D basin models and published stable-isotope data show that K-S diagenesis is likely to have occurred during deep-burial diagenesis in the last 4 Myr. Modeling predicts that CO2-rich fluids were generating from thermal decarboxylation of intraformational Paleocene coals at this time, and accumulation of high partial pressures of intraformational CO2 in the hydrocarbon column is considered a viable catalyst for the diagenetic reactions. Variable CO2 concentrations and residence times are interpreted to be the reason for different levels of K-S diagenesis, which is supported by a clear relationship between the presence or absence of a well-developed K-S zone and the present-day reservoir-corrected CO2 content.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 227-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. A. Midtbø ◽  
J. M. Rykkje ◽  
M. Ramm

AbstractThe Tarbert Formation on a north±south oriented structure along the eastern flank of the Viking Graben has been studied. The reservoir in the two wells studied is buried ~100 m deeper in the northern than in the southern well. The present reservoir temperature is ~130°C. The reservoir quality is good, but due to extensive illitization of kaolin, the northern well shows lower permeability values than the southern well, for similar porosity values. The initial composition of the analysed samples in the two wells is very similar. There are no significant differences in total clay content and both wells contain K-feldspars and kaolin. However, the diagenetic alteration is more advanced in the deeper well. Total porosity is about the same in both wells but, due to illitization, the ratio of micro- vs. macro-porosity is higher in the deeper well. Petroleum emplacement in the structure occurred in two phases: oil emplacement predates, whereas gas emplacement postdates, most of the quartz cementation. In the deeper well, illitization occurred after gas emplacement.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomotaka Kuwahara ◽  
Keiji Saito

Abstract The area law for entanglement provides one of the most important connections between information theory and quantum many-body physics. It is not only related to the universality of quantum phases, but also to efficient numerical simulations in the ground state. Various numerical observations have led to a strong belief that the area law is true for every non-critical phase in short-range interacting systems. However, the area law for long-range interacting systems is still elusive, as the long-range interaction results in correlation patterns similar to those in critical phases. Here, we show that for generic non-critical one-dimensional ground states with locally bounded Hamiltonians, the area law robustly holds without any corrections, even under long-range interactions. Our result guarantees an efficient description of ground states by the matrix-product state in experimentally relevant long-range systems, which justifies the density-matrix renormalization algorithm.


Geology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (12) ◽  
pp. 1181-1184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosine Riera ◽  
Julien Bourget ◽  
Victorien Paumard ◽  
Moyra E.J. Wilson ◽  
Jeffrey Shragge ◽  
...  

Abstract Recognition of seismic unconformities is crucial for interpreting basin history from seismic reflection data sets in both siliciclastic and carbonate settings. While it is well established that non-erosional changes in sedimentary facies can create seismic reflections that mimic seismic unconformities (i.e., pseudo-unconformities), these features are generally considered to be localized and uncommon, and, therefore, are largely overlooked during interpretation. Diagenetic alteration of strata can also affect the morphology of seismic reflectors and mislead seismic interpreters. This study is based on a three-dimensional (3-D) seismic data set and documents a 400 km2 honeycomb structure (HS) masquerading as a regional erosional unconformity in the Oligocene–Miocene carbonate strata of Australia’s North West Shelf. This HS is located at the transition between the topsets and the foresets of clinoforms of carbonate to marly composition. The HS expression in 3-D seismic data cross sections is irregular, giving the HS the appearance of a truncated surface that could erroneously be interpreted as a regional seismic unconformity. Closer examination reveals that the HS crosscuts chronostratigraphic clinoform reflectors, and frequency extraction processing shows that the HS dominantly falls within a lower-frequency band than the clinoform reflectors. The morphology of the HS (i.e., continuous with densely packed cells) and its time-transgressive nature suggest that it has a burial diagenetic origin. This suggests that creation of pseudo-unconformities at basin scale by burial diagenesis may lead to surface misidentification, with negative consequences for paleoenvironmental studies and petroleum exploration activities.


Khazanah ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nawwal Hikmah ◽  
◽  
Dewi Agustiningsih ◽  
Elma Retna Dewi ◽  
Nyayu Shafiyah Mahira ◽  
...  

Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is one of semiconductor material which has been used as photocatalyst that has very good potency to oxidize some hazardous organic compounds like dye waste, medical and pharmacological waste, and etc. Although TiO2 has high oxidation capacity for photocatalytic degradation, it has some deficiencies which can limit its application as photocatalyst. Those deficiencies are TiO2 is easily agglomerated, its charge carrier is conveniently formed as recombination, and it has low surface area. This article provides a review of a composite which consists of TiO2 as the dispersed phase and SiO2 as the matrix, this composite has better photacatalytic performance than TiO2 itself. SiO2 can increase the surface area of TiO2, prevent the agglomeration of TiO2 particle, and avoid the recombination of TiO2’s charge carrier. Consequently, it can improve the ability of TiO2 to do photocatalytic degradation. Agricultural wastes that consist of high silica content is potentially used as the resource of SiO2 in this composite and biosilica that is produced from natural waste has biocompatible and biodegradable properties. This article also provides it’s application for various dye photocatalytic degradation.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. G. Taylor ◽  
J . H. S. Macquaker

An understanding of the nature and scales of diagenetic variability within organic-rich mudstones is critical to the accurate assessment of shale-gas reservoir properties, as well as for elucidating chemical evolution pathways within mudstones. Here we integrate field observations with thin section descriptions (optical and electron optical techniques) and mineralogical data for the Blackhawk Member time-equivalent Mancos Shale in Book Cliffs, Utah, to determine the impacts of early and burial diagenesis on this mudstone succession.The detrital assemblage in the Mancos Shale comprises quartz-silt, feldspar, clay minerals, dolomite and organic matter (TOC of 1 to 2.5%). Biogenic silica is negligible. Field mapping reveals laterally continuous (km scale), ferroan dolomite cemented units up to 0.3 m thick, are present. These cemented units cap both coarsening-upward units (1 to 3 m thick), and stacked successions of coarsening-upward units (5 to 15 m thick). These upward-coarsening sediment packages, capped by dolomite cemented strata, correlate to bedsets and parasequences in updip settings. Pervasive cementation in these dolomite-cemented units is likely to have occurred prior to compaction as a result of bacterially mediated respiratory processes. Cementation at these levels is particularly evident because cement precipitation occurred during breaks in sediment accumulation below marine flooding surfaces. The abundance of dolomite cements highlights the importance of macroscopic-scale diagenetic carbonate mobility in these mudstones.In addition to carbonate-cements, diagenetic alteration and precipitation of quartz and alumina-silicate minerals are also important in these mudstones. Kaolinite is present both in uncompacted test of organisms and as vein fills in septarian concretions. Kaolinite precipitation is interpreted to have occurred prior to significant compaction and indicates that both silicon and aluminium were mobile during early diagenesis. We interpret the abundance of early diagenetic kaolinite cement to be the result of Al-mobilization by organic acids generated during organic matter oxidation reactions, with the Al sourced from poorly crystalline detrital aluminium oxides and clay minerals. There is also indirect evidence for burial diagenetic kaolinitization of feldspar grains. Quartz cement takes the form of quartz overgrowths and microcrystalline quartz crystals. Textures and CL spectra for the quartz microcrystalline cement suggests that recrystallization of biogenic silica (opal-A) was likely to have been an important source for quartz cements, although smectite-to-illite transformation may have contributed some. These mineral phases highlight that microscopic-scale diagenetic mobility of silica is important, even within mudstones lacking obvious sources of biogenic silica and is likely to be an important processes in a wide range of mudstones.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Magnall ◽  
N. Hayward ◽  
S. A. Gleeson ◽  
A. Schleicher ◽  
I. Dalrymple ◽  
...  

Abstract The Teena Zn-Pb deposit is located in the Carpentaria Zn Province (Australia), which contains some of the largest clastic dominant (CD-type) massive sulfide Zn-Pb deposits in the world. The timing of the main stage of hydrothermal sulfide mineralization in the Teena subbasin is constrained to the midstage of burial diagenesis, during a period of short-lived regional extension. To distinguish hydrothermal alteration from spatially and temporally overlapping burial diagenetic alteration, and to establish the primary controls on hydrothermal mass transfer, it is necessary to evaluate the various foot- and hanging-wall alteration assemblages that formed between early- (eogenesis) and late- (mesogenesis) stage diagenesis. To achieve this, we have statistically evaluated a large lithogeochemistry dataset (n >2,500) and selected a subset (n = 65) of representative samples for detailed mineralogical (X-ray diffraction, illite crystallinity) and petrographic (scanning electron microscopy) analyses; hyperspectral core imaging data were then used to upscale key paragenetic observations. We show that sulfide mineralization was predated by multiple diagenetic alteration assemblages, including stratiform pyrite, dolomite nodules and cement, disseminated hematite and authigenic K-feldspar. These assemblages formed during eogenesis in multiple subbasins across the broader McArthur Basin and are not part of the synmineralization alteration footprint. Whereas pyrite and dolomite formed primarily from the in situ degradation of organic matter, feldspar authigenesis was the product of K metasomatism that was focused along permeable coarse-grained volcaniclastic sandstone beds within the host-rock sequence. The immature volcaniclastic input is broadly representative of the siliciclastic compositional end member in the subbasin, which formed the protolith for phyllosilicate (illite, phengite, chlorite) formation during burial diagenesis. There is no evidence of extensive phyllosilicate alteration in any of the geochemical, mineralogical (illite crystallinity), or petrographic datasets, despite some evidence of K-feldspar replacement by sphalerite in the Lower and Main mineralized lenses. Rather, the high Zn grades formed via dolomite replacement, which is resolvable from a chemical mass balance analysis and consistent with petrographic observations. There are significant exploration implications associated with carbonate-replacement sulfide mineralization during mesogenesis: (1) the capacity for secondary porosity generation in the host rock is as important as its sulfate-reducing capacity; (2) hydrothermal mineralization has a short-range cryptic lateral and vertical synmineralization alteration footprint due to acid neutralization by a carbonate-rich protolith; and (3) the distribution and chemistry of premineralization phases (e.g., pyrite, dolomite nodules) cannot be directly related to the mineralization footprint, which is localized to the 4th-order subbasin scale. Future exploration for this deposit style should therefore be focused on identifying units that contain a mixture of organic carbon and carbonate in the protolith, at favorable stratigraphic redox boundaries, and proximal to feeder growth faults.


1994 ◽  
Vol 118 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 173-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Hall ◽  
M.G. Stamatakis ◽  
J.N. Walsh

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-26
Author(s):  
R. Dańko ◽  
J. Dańko ◽  
M. Skrzyński

Abstract The cumulative results of investigations of the possibility of using the reclaimed materials after the mechanical, thermal or mechanical-thermal reclamation for making cores by means of the blowing method in the alkaline CO2 technology, are presented in the paper. Three kinds of spent sands: with furfuryl resin, bentonite and alkaline phenolic resin, obtained from the foundry, were subjected to three kinds of reclamation: mechanical, thermal and combined mechanical-thermal, applying for this aim adequate experimental devices. The obtained reclaims were assessed with regard to the degree of the matrix liberation from the determined binding material. Reclaims of moulding sands with binders of the form of resin were assessed with regard to ignition loss values and pH reaction, while reclaims of moulding sands with bentonite with regard to the residual clay content and pH value. In all cases the results of the performed sieve analyses were estimated and the average characteristic diameter dl was determined. The reclaimed matrix was applied as a full substitute of the fresh high-silica sand in typical procedures of preparing core sands used for making shaped samples for bending strength investigations, Rgu.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document