Evolution of Clays in Cretaceous Marly Series (Álava Block, Basque Cantabrian Basin, Spain): Diagenesis and Detrital Input Control
Metadatos
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MDPI
Materia
Marls Diagenesis Inherited minerals Mixed layers Layer charge Illitization
Fecha
2019-01-12Referencia bibliográfica
Arostegui, Javier; Arroyo, Xabier; Nieto, Fernando; Bauluz, Blanca. Evolution of Clays in Cretaceous Marly Series (Álava Block, Basque Cantabrian Basin, Spain): Diagenesis and Detrital Input Control. Minerals 2019, 9, 40. [doi:10.3390/min9010040]
Patrocinador
This research was funded by the Spanish Government FEDER project CGL 2015-65404-R/BTE, CGL2016-75679-P, by the Basque Government project IT930-16, Research Group RNM-179 of the Junta de Andalucía and the Aragon Government project E18_17R.Resumen
Two stratigraphic sections of carbonate sediments with significant thickness differences
and without appreciable tectonic deformation were studied near the trough and on a threshold zone
at the Álava Trough. Such characteristics make them appropriate to analyze the influence of a slow
progression of the diagenesis over the original clay suite. X Ray Diffraction (XRD), Transmission
Electron Microscopy (TEM) and Analytical Electron Microscopy (AEM) techniques were applied
in natural and alkylammonium-treated samples. Diagenesis slightly modified the clay mineralogy,
the disappearance of smectite, and the variation in the content and ordering of the I/S mixed
layer, with burial being the most noteworthy process. The total charge in the 2:1 expandable
layers of smectite and I/S shows a slight increase, preferentially located on tetrahedral sheets,
with depth. The data suggest a moderate diagenesis grade for the studied materials. The combination
of techniques allowed identification of several types of detrital micaceous phases, as well-crystallized
K-rich micas, Na-K micas, mica-chlorite stacks, and illites, with an expandable behaviour after the
alkylammonium treatment. The total charge of illites did not change with diagenesis, suggesting their
detrital origin. This research shows that the detrital assemblage masks the diagenetic evolution in the
basin, which indicates the importance of the combination of different techniques to infer correctly the
diagenetic grade in a sedimentary basin.