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Journal ArticleDOI

Approach to chemical equilibrium in diagenetic chlorites

TLDR
In this paper, electron microprobe analyses were made on diagenetic chlorites in sandstones and mudstones from two deep wells according to the petrographic character of the chlorite occurrence: as pseudomorphic phases, rims on quartz or glauconite or as distinct phases in the clay matrix.
Abstract
Electron microprobe analyses were made on diagenetic chlorites in sandstones and mudstones from two deep wells according to the petrographic character of the chlorite occurrence: as pseudomorphic phases, rims on quartz or glauconite or as distinct phases in the clay matrix. Chlorite compositions do not depend upon crystallization site (reacting phases) making it apparent that new chlorites can form in an approach to chemical equilibrium at or near the surface (40° C, 1 km depth). Comparison of this data with that for late diagenetic and early metamorphic chlorites indicates that the compositional range for different grains in the same thin section is similar for the samples throughout the 40°–270° C temperature span. Compositional range decreases upon further metamorphism. Al content appears to be a more reliable indicator of temperature variations than other substitutions in the chlorite structure. The clay mineral assemblage which indicates sedimentary facies affects the trends in composition (Al increase or decrease) as a function of temperature. The octahedral site occupancy show a general increase in going from diagenesis to metamorphic conditions in pelitic rocks. The range of Fe-Mg ratios seems to depend more on the chemistry of each sample than the temperature of formation of the minerals.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Chlorite geothermometry; a review

TL;DR: In this article, a comparative analysis of chlorite geothermometers is presented, showing that no single chlorite analysis performs satisfactorily over the whole range of natural conditions (different temperatures, coexisting assemblages, Fe/(Fe + Mg), fO2, etc.).
Journal ArticleDOI

Clay mineral thermometry : a critical perspective

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the solubility experiments on the stabilities of clay minerals are unlikely to attain equilibrium at low temperatures and that the activity of soluble species may be controlled by surface equilibria, or by absorbed or exchangeable cations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Octahedral Occupancy and the Chemical Composition of Diagenetic (Low-Temperature) Chlorites

Stephen Hillier, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1991 - 
TL;DR: The chemical composition of 500 diagenetic chlorites, determined by electron microprobe, has been studied in six different sedimentary sequences spanning conditions from early diagenesis to low-grade metamorphism, in the temperature range 40-330°C.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chlorite crystallinity: an empirical approach and correlation with illite crystallinity, coal rank and mineral facies as exemplified by Palaeozoic and Mesozoic rocks of northeast Hungary

TL;DR: In this article, positive linear correlations were found between peak widths measured on the first two basal reflections of chlorite and those of illite-muscovite in <2-μm fractions of a representative shale-slate-phyllite series from Palaeozoic and Mesozoic formations of northeast Hungary.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new chlorite geothermometer for diagenetic to low-grade metamorphic conditions

Abstract: The evolution of chlorite composition with temperature (and pressure) serves as basis to a number of chlorite chemical thermometers, for which the oxidation state of iron has been recognised as a recurrent issue, especially at low temperature (T). A new chlorite geothermometer that does not require prior Fe3+ knowledge is formulated, calibrated on 161 analyses with well-constrained T data covering a wide range of geological contexts and tested here for low-T chlorites (T < 350 °C and pressures below 4 kbar). The new solid-solution model used involves six end-member components (the Mg and Fe end-members of ‘Al-free chlorite S’, sudoite and amesite) and so accounts for all low-T chlorite compositions; ideal mixing on site is assumed, with an ordered cationic distribution in tetrahedral and octahedral sites. Applied to chlorite analyses from three distinct low-T environments for which independent T data are available (Gulf Coast, Texas; Saint Martin, Lesser Antilles; Toyoha, Hokkaido), the new pure-Fe2+ thermometer performs at least as well as the recent models, which require an estimate of Fe3+ content. This relief from the ferric iron issue, combined with the simple formulation of the semi-empirical approach, makes the present thermometer a very practical tool, well suited for, for example, the handling of large analytical datasets—provided it is used in the calibration range (T < 350 °C, P < 4 kbar).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A chlorite solid solution geothermometer the Los Azufres (Mexico) geothermal system

TL;DR: In this article, the tetrahedral charge is positively correlated with the octahedral vacancy and negatively with the iron content, and there is almost no correlation with the Octahedral aluminium and magnesium content.
Journal ArticleDOI

Equilibria in the system Al 2 O 3 -SiO 2 -H 2 O and some general implications for alteration/mineralization processes

TL;DR: In this article, the aqueous silica-dependent equilibria were investigated for the Al 2 O 3 -SiO 2 -H 2 O system and the results have applications to a wide variety of mineralizing environments and provide a basis for derivation of much needed thermodynamic data.
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Authigenic layer silicate minerals in borehole Elmore 1, Salton Sea Geothermal Field, California, USA

TL;DR: A combined petrographic/X-ray/electron microprobe and energy dispersive system investigation of sandstone cuttings from borehole Elmore # 1 near the center of the Salton Sea Geothermal Field has revealed numerous regular variations in the composition, texture, mineralogy and proportions of the authigenic layer silicate minerals.
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Pressure-temperature-composition of illite/smectite mixed layer minerals -Niger Delta mudstones and other examples.

TL;DR: In this paper, X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) studies of the clay fraction of Upper Cretaceous mudstones from a shallow (2.5 kin) drill hole in the Niger delta indicate a high geothermal gradient (about 100~ km) during diagenesis.
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