Author:
Jeans C. V.,Merriman R. J.,Mitchell J. G.,Bland D. J.
Abstract
AbstractThe mineralogy, petrology and trace element geochemistry of volcanogenic glauconites and smectite-rich clays are described and related to clay assemblages in Lower and Upper Cretaceous sediments of southern England and Northern Ireland. Volcanogenic glauconite grains represent argillized lava particles of predominantly mafic composition and may have been derived from submarine basaltic magmatism; they occur in all the sediments examined (Aptian-Senonian), and are particularly abundant in the Cenomanian-Campanian Hibernian Greensand of Antrim. The smectite-rich clays in southern England have developed by the argillization of predominantly acid or alkaline ash during early diagenesis. Three types of volcanogenic deposit are recognized. Primary bentonites are thin ash-falls deposited in quiet, brackish and marine waters (Speeton Clay, Ryazanian; Weald Clay, Barremian). Secondary bentonites are local accumulations of ash transported into the Cretaceous seas by rivers draining ash-blanketed, local land areas (London Platform, Portsdown Axis). These deposits are well-developed in the Sandgate Beds, Folkestone Beds and their contiguous deposits, and the lower part of the Gault (Upper Aptian-Middle Albian). The ash originated from penecontemporaneous, subaerial vulcanism located in the southern part of the North Sea. The most conspicuous phase of activity occurred during late Aptian times and has been dated by 40Ar/39Ar isotope analysis at 112 m.y. Bentonitic clays and marls are widespread accumulations of argillized ash that occur as a fine-grained fringing facies to glauconitic quartz sand facies. They make up the upper part of the Atherfleld Clay (Aptian) and the upper part of the Gault (Upper Albian), and they are associated respectively with the Hythe Beds (Aptian) and the Upper Greensand (Upper Albian). They may also occur in the lower part of the Lower Chalk (Cenomanian). The distribution pattern of these smectite-rich clays in southern England is related to the changing palaeogeography of the area in Cretaceous times, and the general coincidence of extensive glaueonite deposits and smectite-rich clays in the Middle and Upper Cretaceous of western Europe and along the eastern seaboard of North America is briefly discussed.
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology
Cited by
95 articles.
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