1. Controls on Associations of Clay Minerals in Phanerozoic Evaporite Formations: An Overview
- Author
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Sofiya P. Hryniv, Tadeusz Marek Peryt, Serhiy Vovnyuk, Fanwei Meng, and Yaroslava Yaremchuk
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,lcsh:QE351-399.2 ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Evaporite ,Phanerozoic ,Geochemistry ,engineering.material ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,complex mixtures ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Kaolinite ,Chlorite ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,pyroclastic material ,lcsh:Mineralogy ,seawater chemical type ,Palygorskite ,Geology ,Authigenic ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,clay minerals ,marine evaporites ,chemistry ,Illite ,engineering ,Clay minerals ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Information on the associations of clay minerals in Upper Proterozoic and Phanerozoic marine evaporite formations suggests that cyclic changes in the (SO4-rich and Ca-rich) chemical type of seawater during the Phanerozoic could affect the composition of associations of authigenic clay minerals in marine evaporite deposits. The vast majority of evaporite clay minerals are authigenic. The most common are illite, chlorite, smectite and disordered mixed-layer illite-smectite and chlorite-smectite, all the clay minerals are included regardless of their quantity. Corrensite, sepiolite, palygorskite and talc are very unevenly distributed in the Phanerozoic. Other clay minerals (perhaps with the exception of kaolinite) are very rare. Evaporites precipitated during periods of SO4-rich seawater type are characterized by both a greater number and a greater variety of clay minerals&mdash, smectite and mixed-layer minerals, as well as Mg-corrensite, palygorskite, sepiolite, and talc, are more common in associations. The composition of clay mineral association in marine evaporites clearly depends on the chemical type of seawater and upon the brine concentration in the evaporite basin. Along with increasing salinity, aggradational transformations of clay minerals lead to the ordering of their structure and, ideally, to a decrease in the number of minerals. In fact, evaporite deposits of higher stages of brine concentration often still contain unstable clay minerals. This is due to the intense simultaneous volcanic activity that brought a significant amount of pyroclastic material into the evaporite basin, intermediate products of its transformation (in the form of swelling minerals) often remained in the deposits of the potassium salt precipitation stage.
- Published
- 2020