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Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemical classification of terrigenous sands and shales from core or log data

Michael M. Herron
- 01 Sep 1988 - 
- Vol. 58, Iss: 5, pp 820-829
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TLDR
In this article, a means of relating geochemical concentrations to existing sandstone classification schemes is proposed based on three chemical parameters: the SiO2/Al2O3 ratio, the Fe 2O3/K2O ratio, and the Ca content.
Abstract
A means of relating geochemical concentrations to existing sandstone classification schemes is based on three chemical parameters: the SiO2/Al2O3 ratio, the Fe2O3/K2O ratio, and the Ca content. In terrigenous sands and shales, the SiO2/Al2O3 ratio separates Si-rich quartzarenites from Al-rich shales, with other sand types showing intermediate values. The ratio of total iron (as Fe2O3) to K2O separates lithic sands (litharenites and sublitharenites) from feldspathic sands (arkoses and subarkoses). In addition, very high Fe2O3/K2O ratios indicate Fe-rich shales (e.g., pyritic, sideritic, hematitic) or Fe-rich sands (e.g., gl uconitic) depending on the silica/alumina ratio. The Ca content is used to differentiate noncalcareous from calcareous sandstones and shales and to separate siliciclastic from carbonate rocks. Sandstones are classified the same by this scheme as by petrographic analysis about 84% of the time, and shales are effectively discriminated from sandstones. The requisite input data can be accurately supplied by geochemical well-logging measurements, enabling unbiased sandstone classification to be displayed on a continuous basis with depth.

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Universidade federal do rio grande do sul instituto de geociências programa de pós-graduação em geografia

TL;DR: In this article, the spatial distribution of key smectite properties was modeled by using XRD traces and XRF chemical analysis results, expressed in a notable decrease of a SiO2, K2O, Na2O indicating less quartz and feldspar species.
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Provenance and depositional environment of epi-shelf lake sediment from Schirmacher Oasis, East Antarctica, vis-à-vis scanning electron microscopy of quartz grain, size distribution and chemical parameters

TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied scanning electron microscopic (SEM) analysis to evaluate the sedimentary provenance, modes of transport, weathering characteristics, alteration, and sedimentary environment of selected detrital quartz grains from the peripheral part of two epi-shelf lakes (ESL-1 and ESL-2) of the Schirmacher Oasis of East Antarctica.
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Continuous Holocene input of river sediment to the Indus Submarine Canyon

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present new age and geochemical provenance data from cores covering the last 20 years that show continuous deep-water sedimentation through the Indus submarine canyon since at least 11.0 years, despite the cessation of sedimentation on the upper fan around that time.
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Detrital zircon U-Pb-Hf systematics of Ediacaran metasediments from the French Massif Central: Consequences for the crustal evolution of the north Gondwana margin

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Rare-earth elements in Oligo-Miocenic pelitic sediments from Lagonegro Basin, southern Apennines, Italy: implications for provenance and source area weathering

TL;DR: The Lagonegro Units are a part of the southern Apennines orogenic wedge as discussed by the authors, and the age of the lagonegro successions ranges from lower-middle Triassic to Oligo-Miocene, and they have a peculiar geochemical fingerprint relative to typical shales of post-Archean age.
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