scholarly journals The paleoecological history of two Pennsylvanian black shales / Rainer Zangerl and Eugene S. Richardson, Jr. ; with contributions by Bertram G. Woodland...[et al.].

1963 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rainer Zangerl ◽  
Eugene Stanley Richardson
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
E. N. K. Clarkson ◽  
A. R. Milner ◽  
M. I. Coates

ABSTRACTThe Viséan sequence at East Kirkton was deposited in a shallow lake, set within a richly vegetated landscape formed of volcanic cones a few hundred metres high. There was little volcanic activity, however, while the lake existed, and the many tuff horizons within the sequence were washed in during weathering. The lake may have been generally cool, though of unusual water chemistry, as a result of which the spherulitic East Kirkton Limestone precipitated. At times, however, water temperatures may have risen sharply through localised hot-spring activity; both factors deterred ‘normal’ aquatic life.The bulk of the preserved biota consists of plants (permineralisations and compressions) and dominantly land-living animals, including the oldest terrestrial tetrapods (amphibians and reptiliomorphs), large terrestrial-aquatic eurypterids, the first harvestman and rare millipedes. All these animals lived close to the lake, in a fire-prone forest dominated by gymnosperms and pteridosperms.At a late stage in the history of the lake, deposition of spherulitic limestones was replaced by black shales, bearing a ‘standard’ Oil-Shale fish fauna, suggesting that the isolated lake had linked with a larger fish-bearing water body. This is coupled with a shift to a lycopod-dominated flora and may indicate a climatic change to wetter conditions. Finally the lake silted up with tuff, ending an existence of only a few tens of thousands of years.


Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 414
Author(s):  
David Gómez-Vivo ◽  
Fernando Gervilla ◽  
Rubén Piña ◽  
Rebeca Hernández-Díaz ◽  
Antonio Azor

The Zn-Pb ores of the Castellanos shale-hosted, clastic-dominated deposit in northwest Cuba average nearly 1 g/t Au, with local maximum concentrations up to 34 g/t Au. This deposit is stratiform with respect to the bedding in the host black shales and shows a bottom to top zoning of ore assemblages made up of a stockwork underlying the main orebody, a basal pyrite-rich zone and a disseminated to massive Zn-Pb ore zone capped by a discontinuous, thin barite-rich zone. Petrographic data and textural relations allow distinguishing five textural types of pyrite (framboidal Py I, colloform Py IIa, euhedral Py IIb, massive Py IIc and banded colloform Py III) successively formed during ore deposition. The main Zn-Pb ore formed after the crystallization of disseminated, sedimentary framboidal pyrite (Py I) in black shales by the superimposition of several crystallization events. The crystallization sequence of the main ore-forming stage evolved from the precipitation of colloform sphalerite and pyrite (Py IIa) with skeletal galena and interstitial dolomite-ankerite to similar ore assemblages but showing subhedral to euhedral crystal habits (Py IIb) and interstitial calcite-rich carbonates. This stage ended with the development of massive pyrite (Py IIc), mainly occurring at the base of the stratiform orebody. A late fracturing stage gave way to the development of a new generation of colloform banded pyrite (Py III) just preceding the crystallization of early barite. Au is mainly concentrated in pyrite showing variable contents in the different textural types of pyrite and a bottom to top enrichment trend. Minimum contents occur in massive pyrite (Py IIc) from the basal pyrite-rich zone (0.18 ppm Au average), increasing in pyrite IIa (from 0.29 to 2.86 ppm Au average) and in euhedral pyrite (Py IIb) (from 0.82 to 9.02 ppm Au average), reaching maxima in colloform banded pyrite (Py III) formed just before the crystallization of early barite at the top of the orebody. Au enrichment in pyrite correlates with that of Sb (0.08–4420 ppm), As (0.7–35,000 ppm), Ag (0.03–1560 ppm) and to a lesser extent Cu (3–25,000 ppm), Ni (0.02–1600 ppm) and Mn (0.6–5030 ppm). Au deposition should have taken place by oxidation and, probably cooling, of reduced (H2S-dominated) fluids buffered by organic matter-rich black shales of the host sedimentary sequence. The input of such reduced fluids in the ore-forming environment most probably occurred alternating with that of the main oxidized fluids which leached Zn and Pb from the large volume of sandstones and siltstones making up the enclosing sequence, thus being responsible for the precipitation of the majority Zn-Pb ore. Supply of Au-carrying reduced fluids might progressively increase over the course of ore formation, reaching a maximum at the beginning of the late fracturing stage. This evolution of Au supply is consistent with the early crystallization of barite since Ba can also only be transported at low temperature by highly reduced fluids. These results highlight the potential of medium-sized, shale-hosted, clastic-dominated deposits to contain economic (by product) Au amounts and show that ore-forming fluids can change from oxidized (SO42+ dominated) to reduced (H2S-dominated), and vice versa, throughout the evolutionary history of a single deposit.


Ecology ◽  
1964 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 425-426
Author(s):  
Rezneat M. Darnell
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan R Hlohowskyj ◽  
◽  
Anthony Chappaz ◽  
Omid Haeri Ardakani ◽  
Hamed Sanei

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosanna Maniscalco ◽  
Sveva Corrado ◽  
Martina Balestra ◽  
Andrea Schito ◽  
Claudio Ivan Casciano ◽  
...  

<p>The upper Triassic Streppenosa and Noto Formations are considered the main source rocks of the Hyblean Plateau in south-eastern Sicily, that represents the present-day deformed foreland of the Sicilian fold-and-thrust belt. This work focusses on the Upper Triassic Streppenosa and Noto Formations, penetrated by the Eureka 1 onshore well (south-eastern Sicily, Italy) in order to constrain the burial-thermal history of this basin of the western Tethys. According to previous paleogeographic reconstructions, starting from Norian, the palaeogeographic scenario consisted, moving from north to south, of a wide carbonate platform (Sciacca Fm.), adjacent to two different domains: the euxinic lagoon/basin of the Noto Formation, and, to the south, the basin of the Streppenosa Formation. Eureka 1 well is located in the inner portion of the platform-basin system and its Triassic succession consists of alternation of black shales and micritic, microbial dolomitic laminated limestones. A detailed description of the sedimentological facies from cores samples has been performed together with detailed organic petrography/Raman spectroscopy and clay mineralogy on fine grained sediments to assess thermal maturity of the Streppenosa and Noto Fms.<span> </span>The main facies consist of light-grey limestones (wackestone-mudstone) with scattered sub-angular intraclast, light grey finely laminated limestones, dark grey-black laminated mudstones, brownish undulated algal laminae saturated with bitumen. The cores are often bitumen saturated and interrupted by different sets of open microfractures, veins filled with calcite, and stylolites (parallel and vertical with respect to lamination) that may enhance and/or inhibit at places the fluid flow. Concerning thermal maturity, the studied interval falls in the lower-mid portion of the oil window, with robust agreement among the geothermometers derived from the three adopted techniques.</p>


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