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Pyrite Textures, Trace Elements and Sulfur Isotope Chemistry of Bijaigarh Shales, Vindhyan Basin, India and Their Implications

Authors :
Sebastien Meffre
Janaína N. Ávila
Jacqueline A. Halpin
Ross R. Large
IA Belousov
Indrani Mukherjee
Mihir Deb
Source :
Minerals, Vol 10, Iss 588, p 588 (2020), Minerals, Volume 10, Issue 7
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

The Vindhyan Basin in central India preserves a thick (~5 km) sequence of sedimentary and lesser volcanic rocks that provide a valuable archive of a part of the Proterozoic (~1800&ndash<br />900 Ma) in India. Here, we present an analysis of key sedimentary pyrite textures and their trace element and sulfur isotope compositions in the Bijaigarh Shale (1210 &plusmn<br />52 Ma) in the Vindhyan Supergroup, using reflected light microscopy, LA-ICP-MS and SHRIMP-SI, respectively. A variety of sedimentary pyrite textures (fine-grained disseminated to aggregates, framboids, lags, and possibly microbial pyrite textures) are observed reflecting quiet and strongly anoxic water column conditions punctuated by occasional high-energy events (storm incursions). Key redox sensitive or sensitive to oxidative weathering trace elements (Co, Ni, Zn, Mo, Se) and ratios of (Se/Co, Mo/Co, Zn/Co) measured in sedimentary pyrites from the Bijaigarh Shale are used to infer atmospheric redox conditions during its deposition. Most trace elements are depleted relative to Proterozoic mean values. Sulfur isotope compositions of pyrite, measured using SHRIMP-SI, show an increase in ծ34S as we move up stratigraphy with positive ծ34S values ranging from 5.9&permil<br />(lower) to 26.08&permil<br />(upper). We propose limited sulphate supply caused the pyrites to incorporate the heavier isotope. Overall, we interpret these low trace element signatures and heavy sulfur isotope compositions to indicate relatively suppressed oxidative weathering on land during the deposition of the Bijaigarh Shale.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
10
Issue :
588
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Minerals
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c0c22ff8bc3494b3cff72856a68491d