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Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution and Origin of Analcime in Marginal Lacustrine Mudstones of the Green River Formation, South-Central Uinta Basin, Utah

Robert R. Remy, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1985 - 
- Vol. 37, Iss: 5, pp 419-432
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TLDR
X-ray powder diffraction and thin section analyses indicate that marginal lacustrine mudstones of the Green River Formation in the south-central Uinta basin, Utah, contain abundant analcime as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
X-Ray powder diffraction and thin section analyses indicate that marginal lacustrine mudstones of the Green River Formation in the south-central Uinta basin, Utah, contain abundant analcime. The analcime has a low Si/Al ratio (<2.31) and occurs as very fine grained disseminated crystals and, to a lesser extent, as coarser-grained pore-filling cement. Analcime-rich mudstones and associated sandstones, siltstones, and carbonates lack volcanic detritus and zeolites other than analcime, thus making it difficult to support the concept that the analcime formed from precursor zeolites derived from volcanic glass altered in saline, alkaline-lake water. Abundant dolomite, syneresis cracks, and the absence of freshwater pelecypods and gastropods suggest that the lake (Lake Uinta) was moderately saline and alkaline. The restricted illite-illite/smectite clay mineral suite in the analcime-rich mudstones suggests that detrital clays significantly altered in a moderately saline and alkaline environment, thereby providing a source of Si and Al for the formation of analcime. Red mudstones contain twice as much analcime as green mudstones (14 vs. 7 wt. %). Green mudstones have a day mineral suite consisting of illite (44 wt. %), mixed-layer illite/smectite (35 wt. %), smectite (12 wt. %), and minor kaolinite (4 wt. %) and chlorite (5 wt. %), whereas red mudstones have a more restricted day mineral suite consisting ofillite (68 wt. %) and mixed-layer illite/smectite (26 wt. %) with very minor smectite, chlorite, and kaolinite. Periodic minor fluctuations in lake level probably exposed large areas of shallow lacustrine-interdistributary green mud. Evaporative pumping on the exposed mudflats concentrated the moderately saline and alkaline-lake water, thereby producing Na-rich brines that enhanced the formation of analcime by accelerating the alteration of detrital clays and, perhaps, other minerals. Oxidation of iron from altered iron-bearing minerals stained the analcime-rich mud red with iron hydroxide or oxide (perhaps hematite). The overall reaction from green to red mud (mudstones) was probably: detrital phyllosilicates + Na-brine + iron-bearing minerals + oxygen → analcime + iron hydroxide or iron oxide.

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Citations
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Fly ash zeolites for water treatment applications

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Occurrence of Zeolites in Sedimentary Rocks: An Overview

TL;DR: A wide variety of zeolites have been identified in sedimentary deposits, with the most common being clinoptilolite, analcime, heulandite, laumontite, and phillipsite as discussed by the authors.
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Permian climate development in the northern peri-Tethys area — The Lodève basin, French Massif Central, compared in a European and global context

TL;DR: The Lodeve basin this paper contains an exceptional long and nearly uninterrupted profile of Early to Late Permian continental red beds, which is well correlated to the other European Permocarboniferous basins.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a set of processes involving water-rock interaction that was prevalent early in Mars history and may have profoundly influenced the evolution of Martian geochemical systems, including near surface weathering, formation in ice-dominated near surface groundwaters, and formation by subsurface hydrothermal fluids.
References
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OtherDOI

Quantitative interpretation of mineralogical composition from X-ray and chemical data for the Pierre Shale

L.G. Schultz
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an X-ray analysis of carbonate minerals, including sulfide, sulfate, and carbonate fraction data, and compare them with chemical analyses.
Book ChapterDOI

Freshwater Carbonate Sedimentation

Kerry Kelts, +1 more
TL;DR: Carbonate minerals are a common constituent of lacustrine sediments, and the dominant mineral is calcite as mentioned in this paper, which can be seen as an indicator of the presence of biological processes.
Book ChapterDOI

The Mineralogy and Related Chemistry of Lake Sediments

TL;DR: The sediment reservoir of a lake plays an important role in helping to elucidate the many processes occurring within the total lake system, including its surrounding surface and ground water drainage basins as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preliminary experiments on hydrodynamic movement induced by evaporation and their bearing on the dolomite problem

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrate that saline interstitial waters under an arid coastal plain could be set in hydrodynamic movement to replace the evaporative loss near the surface.
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