Abstract
AbstractThe vertical clay mineral distribution pattern in two sediment cores taken from two East African lakes has been studied in detail. In the core from Lake Albert (Mobutu Sese Seko) a clay assemblage consisting principally of smectite with some illite and kaolinite in the uppermost segment of the core changed with depth into first a mixed-layer illite-smectite dominated clay and then at 6·60 m into an iltite dominated clay. Lower in the core there was again a transition towards interlayer mixtures, and in the bottom segment towards smectite. These changes are interpreted as a diagenetic transformation of smectite into illite, effected by saline palaeo-lake water with an unusually high K/Na ratio. Three smectite→illite-smectite→illite transition cycles were recognized in a 56 m deep sediment core from Lake Manyara. The sections in which illite dominated contained silt-sized analcime, while those with interlayer mixtures contained alkaline zeolites. The diagenetic illitization of smectite appeared to parallel the process of analcime formation, the K necessary for illitization being released during K,Na-zeolite→analcime transformation. These occurrences suggest that high temperature and pressure may not constitute absolute prerequisites for the diagenetic illitization of smectite.
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology
Cited by
79 articles.
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