The southernmost occurrence of the volcanic-rich layer of 5.5 Main the Northern Apennines: clues on its deposition

Author(s):  
Davide Potere ◽  
Gianluca Iezzi ◽  
Vittorio Scisciani ◽  
Anna Chiara Tangari ◽  
Manuela Nazzari

<p>A volcanic-rich horizon crops along the Northern Apennines chain for about 200 km, in the post-evaporitic sedimentary sequence with an age of 5.5 Ma. Its thickness ranges between 30-200 cm and has been interpreted either as a primary fallout or a giant gravity flow in seawater (Aldinucci et al., 2005; Trua et al., 2010; Cosentino et al., 2013). Here, we focus on the two southernmost occurrences in the Abruzzo region (Central Italy): Castiglione a’ Casauria (CAC 42°14'10'' 13°53'29') and San Vittorino (SVT 42°12'10'' 13°53'29'') villages.</p><p>The SVT and CAC deposits are lithified with thickness of 80 and 220 cm, respectively, mildly fractured and greyish to light brown in colour. Four (SVT) and fifteen (CAC) oriented samples coaxial to the field, were cut and polished to expose about 470 and 700 cm<sup>2</sup>, respectively, of their vertical mesoscopic surfaces. The oriented thin sections and powders were prepared according to these mesoscopic attributes.</p><p>The XRPD (X-ray powder diffraction) spectra show the presence of a peculiar prominent large shoulder reflecting significative silicate non-crystalline phase, i.e. volcanic glass, plus faint Bragg reflections indicative of minor amounts of quartz, two feldspars (anorthite and sanidine), clinopyroxene, biotite and montmorillonite. The latter mineral results from post-emplacement and secondary crystallization. In addition, calcite and dolomite XRPD peaks occur with intensity inversely proportional to that of the silicate glass, reflecting the abundance or paucity of sedimentary versus volcanic fractions in sub-layers.</p><p>The microscopic 2D textures plus compositional features were investigated by SEM and EPMA. Both volcanic layers are very rich in fine-grained (averaging on 200 mm) and highly sorted glassy ashy clasts, while minerals are very poor (< 5 area%) in agreement with XRPD outcomes. Lithified ashes are mainly blocky in shape and un-broken. The ashes plot in the rhyolitic TAS field and overlap those already reported from other Northern Apennine sites. The amount of volatiles (H<sub>2</sub>O + CO<sub>2</sub>) estimated from EPMA average on about 6 wt.%, in agreement with the quantities of LOI determined on both bulk samples.</p><p>Field observations coupled with analysis on mesoscopic polished rock slices and thin sections do not shown any significant vertical size gradation and sorting, while fossils are almost absent. By contrast, both volcanic-rich deposits show: sedimentary- and volcanic-rich sub-layers, cm-sized volcanic clasts dispersed prevalently on the uppermost sedimentary sub-layers, cm-sized convolute laminations and slumped pseudo-beds. All these features demonstrate mass transport, soft-sediment deformation and fluid escape in seawater. Nonetheless, the absence of rounded ashy clasts, lithic sedimentary rock and classic Bouma sequence features (typical in coeval and adjacent deposits) mirror for local remobilization of poorly consolidated to loose carbonate and tephra deposits. In parallel, the high sorting of fine ashy clasts suggest a primary deposition from a distal fall-out eruptions. The location and features of both SVT and CAC volcanic-rich layers extend the previously inferred distribution of this ancient volcanic eruption.</p><p>References</p><p>Aldinucci et al., 2005. GeoActa, 4, 2005, pp. 67-82</p><p>Cosentino et al., 2013. Geology, 41, pp. 323-326</p><p>Trua et al., 2010. Italian Journal of Geosciences, 129, pp. 269-279</p>

Geophysics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (5) ◽  
pp. B165-B176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frédéric E. S. Gaucher ◽  
Richard S. Smith

The magnetic viscosity (MV) effects observed at time scales between 0.01 and 10 ms at Opemiska are associated with magnetic grains of variable size in rocks. Recent observations made during a ground time-domain electromagnetic (TDEM) survey at Opemiska are consistent with four aspects of the spatial and amplitude characteristics of a MV response: (1) the [Formula: see text] decay rate is roughly proportional to [Formula: see text], where [Formula: see text], (2) the anomalies are mainly visible on the [Formula: see text]-component, when the EM receiver sensor is located inside or just outside the transmitter loop, (3) there is no obvious [Formula: see text]- or [Formula: see text]-component response, and (4) the sites where MV effects are seen in the TDEM data are coincident with an airborne magnetic anomaly. Previous studies have demonstrated that MV could be caused by (1) fine-grained particles of maghemite or magnetite in the overburden, regolith, or soil that were formed through lateritic weathering processes, (2) volcanic glass shards from tuff containing approximately 1% by weight magnetite, which occur as grains approximately [Formula: see text] in size precipitated in a spatially uniform way, or (3) from the Gallionella bacterium that precipitates ferrihydrite that oxidizes to nanocrystalline maghemite aggregates. The sites investigated at Opemiska are outcropping and well-exposed with relatively little or no overburden, and they are unfavorable for the formation of maghemite; hence, it is assumed that the source of MV seen at Opemiska cannot be the maghemite, or the other aforementioned causes. Hand samples were collected from Opemiska to identify the minerals present. Polished thin sections observed under an optical reflecting microscope identified the accessory minerals magnetite, ilmenite, and pyrrhotite, all known for their relatively high magnetic susceptibility. The use of the scanning electron microscope confirmed fine-grained magnetite grains as small as [Formula: see text]. An electromagnetic induction spectrometer confirmed the viscous nature of the susceptibility of the Opemiska samples. This suggests that MV could originate not only from fine-grained magnetite and maghemite particles located in the weathered regolith but also from other iron oxides and magnetic minerals embedded in the rock itself.


2021 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 249-304
Author(s):  
Mark Longman ◽  
Virginia Gent ◽  
James Hagadorn

We integrate new and previous stratigraphic and petrographic data for the mid-Turonian Codell Sandstone to interpret its provenance, depositional characteristics, and environments. Our focus is on sedimentologic, X-ray diffraction, and X-ray fluorescence analyses of cores and thin sections spread throughout the Denver Basin, augmented by interpretation and correlation of well logs, isopach maps, outcrops, and provenance data. Although we treat the Codell as a single mappable unit, it actually consists of two geographically disjunct sandstone packages separated by a southwest-northeast-trending gap, the NoCoZo, short for No Codell Zone. The Codell is everywhere capped by a significant unconformity and across much of the northern Denver Basin rests unconformably on the underlying shales of the Carlile Shale. In the southern Denver Basin, the Codell commonly contains two parasequences, each of which becomes less muddy upward. Biostratigraphic and geochonologic data suggest that the unit represents deposition over a relatively brief time, spanning ~0.4 Ma from ~91.7 to ~91.3 Ma. The Codell is predominantly a thin (<50 ft) sheet-like package of pervasively bioturbated coarse siltstone and very fine-grained sandstone dominated by quartz and chert grains 50 to 100 μm in diameter. The unit is more phosphatic than the underlying members of the Carlile Shale, and its grain size coarsens to medium-grained in the northern part of the basin. An unusual aspect of the Codell across our study area is the generally excellent grain sorting despite the presence of an intermixed clay matrix. This duality of well sorted grains in a detrital clay matrix is due to the bioturbation that dominates the unit. Such burrowing created a textural inversion that obscures most of the unit’s primary sedimentary structures, except for thin intervals dominated by interlaminated silty shale and very fine sandstone. A relatively widespread and unburrowed example of this bedded facies is preserved in a thin (<10 ft) interval that extends across most of the northern Denver Basin where it is informally called the middle Codell bedded to laminated lithofacies. Sparse beds with hummocky or swaley cross-stratified and ripple cross-laminated fine-grained sandstone are present locally in this bedded facies. We hypothesize that Codell sediments were derived from a major deltaic source extending into the Western Interior Seaway from northwestern Wyoming, and that the Codell was deposited and reworked southward on the relatively flat floor of the Seaway by waxing and waning shelf currents as well as storms and waves. Codell sediments were spread across an area of more than 100,000 mi2 in this epeiric shelf system that spans eastern Colorado, southeastern Wyoming, western Kansas, parts of Nebraska and beyond.


1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 432-435
Author(s):  
J. A. McKeague ◽  
P. A. Schuppli ◽  
H. Kodama

Nodules 0.1–0.7 mm in diameter seen in thin sections of the C horizon of a soil from the Peace River area of Alberta were analyzed. Energy-dispersive X-ray analysis (EDXRA) showed their composition (%) to be approximately MgO, 3; Al2O3, 22; SiO2, 52; K2O, 4; CaO, 2; Fe2O3, 10. X-ray analysis by Gandolfi camera showed strong glauconite lines and weak lines for quartz and kaolinite. The presence of these relatively large glauconite nodules in an otherwise fine-grained material is incompatible with its presumed lacustrine origin. Presumably, the glauconite nodules were inherited from the Smoky River shale, and the C horizon material may be residual.


1988 ◽  
Vol 37 ◽  
pp. 21-30
Author(s):  
Hans Pauly ◽  
Ole V. Petersen

Bøgvadite, ideally Na2SrBa2A4F20 was found in the central part of a sample of the radiating aggregates in which jarlite occurs in the cryolite deposit, lvigtut, S. Greenland. Thin sections showed b!llgvadite as rectangular, uniformly orientated crystals 0.1--0.2 mm across, arranged as a somewhat irregular pavement covering a few square centimetres. The crystals, partly overgrown with ralstonite crystals, were embedded in a matrix of a kaolin-like mineral interspersed with fine-grained barite. Fan-shaped jarlite grains were scattered in the matrix. Bands and strings of fine­grained, spherulitic K-mica transected the whole mass. The composition of b!llgvadite is derived from the average of 11 microprobe analyses: Na 5.57% (2.0% rel.), Sr 7.03% (9.6% rel.), Ba 32.17% (3.0% rel.), AI 12.45% (0.9% rel.); calculations gave F 42.85% (0.6 rel.). F was found to be between 40% and 45%, but direct determination together with the metals could not be executed satisfactorily. As standards were used cryolite (Na, AI), b!llggildite (Sr), barite (Ba). No other elements were found in detectable amounts. Atomic absorptions spectrometry on a bulk sample showed Li to be below the detection limit (0.2 ppm). Gladstone-Dale calculations give Kc= 0.1073 and K, = 0.1118. Assuming the presence of 2.55% OH (giving F18.7 (OH)u in the formula) results in Kc= K,. Determination of OH/H20 was not possible due to the presence of kaolin and ralstonite. Bøgvadite is orthorhombic and the crystals show {010}, {110} and {012}. They are blocky, slightly platy after {010} and slightly elongated after [100). It is transparent, colourless and has H > 3, VHN25 = 300 ± 50. D = 3.85 ± 0.02 g/cm3, D calculated is 3.898 g/cm3• B!llgvadite is biaxial negative, a= 1.4326, 􀀕 = 1.4360, y = 1.4389 all± 0.0002; 2Va = 87° ± ½0, 2V. calculated = 85° ± 6°; a = c, 􀀕 = a and y = b; 0.A.P. = (100). X-ray powder diffraction and single crystal studies give a = 7.110 ± 0.003, b = 19.907 ± 0.010, c = 5.347 ± 0.003A; space group Pnmn or Pn2n. The new mineral has been named after the late chief geologist Richard B0gvad, of the cryolite company Øresund A/S. Small groups of bøgvadite grains have been observed in thin sections from several samples of the radiating aggregates. This Ba-rich fluoride formed early in the Sr-Ba-rich accumulations within the fluorite cryolite of the deposit.


Author(s):  
S. Cusack ◽  
J.-C. Jésior

Three-dimensional reconstruction techniques using electron microscopy have been principally developed for application to 2-D arrays (i.e. monolayers) of biological molecules and symmetrical single particles (e.g. helical viruses). However many biological molecules that crystallise form multilayered microcrystals which are unsuitable for study by either the standard methods of 3-D reconstruction or, because of their size, by X-ray crystallography. The grid sectioning technique enables a number of different projections of such microcrystals to be obtained in well defined directions (e.g. parallel to crystal axes) and poses the problem of how best these projections can be used to reconstruct the packing and shape of the molecules forming the microcrystal.Given sufficient projections there may be enough information to do a crystallographic reconstruction in Fourier space. We however have considered the situation where only a limited number of projections are available, as for example in the case of catalase platelets where three orthogonal and two diagonal projections have been obtained (Fig. 1).


Author(s):  
T. J. Beveridge

The Bacillus subtilis cell wall provides a protective sacculus about the vital constituents of the bacterium and consists of a collection of anionic hetero- and homopolymers which are mainly polysaccharidic. We recently demonstrated that unfixed walls were able to trap and retain substantial amounts of metal when suspended in aqueous metal salt solutions. These walls were briefly mixed with low concentration metal solutions (5mM for 10 min at 22°C), were well washed with deionized distilled water, and the quantity of metal uptake (atomic absorption and X-ray fluorescence), the type of staining response (electron scattering profile of thin-sections), and the crystallinity of the deposition product (X-ray diffraction of embedded specimens) determined.Since most biological material possesses little electron scattering ability electron microscopists have been forced to depend on heavy metal impregnation of the specimen before obtaining thin-section data. Our experience with these walls suggested that they may provide a suitable model system with which to study the sites of reaction for this metal deposition.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (15) ◽  
pp. 4676
Author(s):  
Jorge Luis Costafreda ◽  
Domingo Alfonso Martín

This work describes the newly discovered zeolites in the eastern region of Cuba. In the researched area, there have been no previous studies of natural zeolite exploration. Therefore, the results shown here are new. The main object of this research is to analyse five samples of zeolites and demonstrate their pozzolanic capacity and the possibility of their usage in the industrial manufacturing of pozzolanic cements. The study of the samples was performed by X-ray diffraction (XRD), X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). A chemical analysis (CAQ) to determine the quality of the samples as pozzolans was performed, by determining the total SiO2, reactive SiO2, total CaO, reactive CaO, Al2O3, MgO and the insoluble residue (I.R.). Lastly, an eight-day pozzolanicity analysis (PA) was carried out to determine the pozzolanic reactivity of the samples. The results obtained by XRD, XRF and SEM established that the researched zeolite samples have two main zeolitic phases: mordenite and clinoptilolite. Altered volcanic glass, quartz and smectite (montmorillonite) are the secondary phases. The results of the chemical quality analysis (CAQ) showed that the samples contain a considerable amount of reactive SiO2 and reactive CaO, as well as a low content of insoluble residue, which reinforces their properties as pozzolans. The results of the pozzolanicity analysis (PA) concluded that the analysed samples actively react with Ca(OH)2 after eight days. Based on all the results mentioned above, it is established that both mordenite and clinoptilolite behave like pozzolans and can be recommended for the manufacture of pozzolanic cements, which have more effective properties than Portland cement, in terms of physical, chemical and mechanical strength, low heat of hydration, resistance to sulphates, low CO2 emissions to the atmosphere and negligible impacts on the environment.


Geosciences ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 135
Author(s):  
Aurélie Labeur ◽  
Nicolas E. Beaudoin ◽  
Olivier Lacombe ◽  
Laurent Emmanuel ◽  
Lorenzo Petracchini ◽  
...  

Unravelling the burial-deformation history of sedimentary rocks is prerequisite information to understand the regional tectonic, sedimentary, thermal, and fluid-flow evolution of foreland basins. We use a combination of microstructural analysis, stylolites paleopiezometry, and paleofluid geochemistry to reconstruct the burial-deformation history of the Meso-Cenozoic carbonate sequence of the Cingoli Anticline (Northern Apennines, central Italy). Four major sets of mesostructures were linked to the regional deformation sequence: (i) pre-folding foreland flexure/forebulge; (ii) fold-scale layer-parallel shortening under a N045 σ1; (iii) syn-folding curvature of which the variable trend between the north and the south of the anticline is consistent with the arcuate shape of the anticline; (iv) the late stage of fold tightening. The maximum depth experienced by the strata prior to contraction, up to 1850 m, was quantified by sedimentary stylolite paleopiezometry and projected on the reconstructed burial curve to assess the timing of the contraction. As isotope geochemistry points towards fluid precipitation at thermal equilibrium, the carbonate clumped isotope thermometry (Δ47) considered for each fracture set yields the absolute timing of the development and exhumation of the Cingoli Anticline: layer-parallel shortening occurred from ~6.3 to 5.8 Ma, followed by fold growth that lasted from ~5.8 to 3.9 Ma.


Metals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 461
Author(s):  
Konrad Kosiba ◽  
Konda Gokuldoss Prashanth ◽  
Sergio Scudino

The phase and microstructure formation as well as mechanical properties of the rapidly solidified Mg67Ag33 (at. %) alloy were investigated. Owing to kinetic constraints effective during rapid cooling, the formation of equilibrium phases is suppressed. Instead, the microstructure is mainly composed of oversaturated hexagonal closest packed Mg-based dendrites surrounded by a mixture of phases, as probed by X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. A possible non-equilibrium phase diagram is suggested. Mainly because of the fine-grained dendritic and interdendritic microstructure, the material shows appreciable mechanical properties, such as a compressive yield strength and Young’s modulus of 245 ± 5 MPa and 63 ± 2 GPa, respectively. Due to this low Young’s modulus, the Mg67Ag33 alloy has potential for usage as biomaterial and challenges ahead, such as biomechanical compatibility, biodegradability and antibacterial properties are outlined.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document