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Journal ArticleDOI

Pyrite in ammonite‐bearing shales from the Jurassic of England and Germany

J. D. Hudson
- 01 Oct 1982 - 
- Vol. 29, Iss: 5, pp 639-667
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TLDR
Pyrite is an important mineral in diagenetic mineral parageneses which can be deduced by studying fossil void-fillings and concretions, and which help define the history of a shale as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Pyrite occurs both in normal clays and shales with a benthic fauna (Oxford Clay, England, and Lias e, Germany) and in highly bituminous shales (Lias e, Germany). In normal shales it is present in small quantities as early framboids, but more conspicuously as internal moulds of fossils, especially ammonites. The pyrite in these is petrographically varied; several types of internal sediments and chamber linings are described and illustrated by reflected-light and scanning electron microscopy. Most striking are pyrite stalactites, suspended from the roofs of ammonite chambers, which were later filled by calcite or baryte. Pyrite formed in reducing micro-environments, while the sediment generally was not wholly anoxic. Most pyrite pre-dates compaction of sediment, breakage of fossils and solution of shell aragonite. Variable rates and conditions of reduction of sea water sulphate are reflected in δ34S values ranging from −55 to +44. Stalactites probably started to form when the ammonite chambers were partially gas-filled. In the bituminous Lias e shales pyrite occurs abundantly as early framboids and micro-nodules. Larger nodules show a variety of forms, some of which post-date compaction of the sediment. Pyrite is not associated with the abundant flattened ammonites. δ34S values in shales are grouped about a mode near −20. Pyrite formed over a long time-span, and throughout the sediment, not just in protected cavities. Contrasts in pyrite types can be related to differing depositional environments and organic contents of the shales. Pyrite is an important mineral in diagenetic mineral parageneses which can be deduced by studying fossil void-fillings and concretions, and which help define the diagenetic history of a shale.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The size distribution of framboidal pyrite in modern sediments : an indicator of redox conditions

TL;DR: In this paper, a survey was made of framboid size distributions in recently deposited sediments from euxinic (Black Sea; Framvaren Fjord, Norway; Pettaquamscutt River Estuary, Rhode Island, USA), dysoxic (Peru Margin), and oxic (Wallops Island, Virginia, USA; Great Salt Marsh, Delaware, USA) environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Posidonia Shale (Lower Toarcian) of SW-Germany: an oxygen-depleted ecosystem controlled by sea level and palaeoclimate

TL;DR: In this article, a time-averaged oxygen curve of the Posidonia Shale in SW-Germany was reconstructed using the benthic macrofauna of nine fossil communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sedimentological, ecological and temporal patterns of fossil Lagerstätten

TL;DR: A more pragmatic, typological classification of conservation deposits, using a standard questionnaire, reveals ecological replacements, as well as trends related to the evolution of the biosphere, through geological time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Konservat-Lagerstätten: cause and classification

Peter A. Allison
- 01 Oct 1988 - 
TL;DR: A review of the processes required for exceptional preservation of soft-bodied fossils demonstrates that anoxia does not significantly inhibit decay and emphasizes the importance of early diagenetic mineralization.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Origin and Distribution of Methane in Marine Sediments

TL;DR: Methane has been detected in several cores of rapidly deposited (> 50 m/my) deep sea sediments as discussed by the authors, and the methane originates predominantly from bacterial reduction of CO2, as indicated by complimentary changes with depth in the amount and isotopic composition of redox-linked pore water constituents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pyrite Framboid Formation; Laboratory Synthesis and Marine Sediments

R. E. Sweeney, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1973 - 
TL;DR: Pyrite framboids were found to form only on spherical nuclei as mentioned in this paper, and both chemical and textural evidence was provided for the pathway of pyrite formation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The distribution and isotopic abundance of sulphur in recent marine sediments off southern California

TL;DR: Analyses of sulphur compounds in basin sediments off southern California indicate that elemental sulphur, free sulphide, hydrotroilite, organic sulphur and pyrite are present in quantities that vary with environment and depth in the sediments as mentioned in this paper.