Glaucony authigenesis, maturity and alteration in the Weddell Sea: An indicator of paleoenvironmental conditions before the onset of Antarctic glaciation
This research used samples from the ODP. We thank the staff at the Gulf Coast core repository for assistance in ODP Leg 113 core handling and shipping. We acknowledge the help of Dr. María del Mar Abad, Dr. Isabel Sánchez Almazo, Dr. Miguel Angel Hidalgo, Dr. Miguel Angel Salas, and Isabel Nieto (S...
Published in: | Scientific Reports |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Springer Nature
2019
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10481/57997 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-50107-1 |
Summary: | This research used samples from the ODP. We thank the staff at the Gulf Coast core repository for assistance in ODP Leg 113 core handling and shipping. We acknowledge the help of Dr. María del Mar Abad, Dr. Isabel Sánchez Almazo, Dr. Miguel Angel Hidalgo, Dr. Miguel Angel Salas, and Isabel Nieto (Scientific Instrumentation Center of the University of Granada, CIC) for their help along different phases of the laboratory work. We also acknowledge the constructive comments of two anonymous reviewers that have helped to improve this paper. We wish to thank Prof. C. Hans Nelson for their constructive comments and improvement of our English, which contributed greatly toward clarification of the text. Thanks are also given to Dr. Francisco J. Lobo and Dr. Fernando Bohoyo for their helpful comments related to the study area and regional tectonics. Three types of glaucony grains were identified in the late Eocene (~35.5–34.1 Ma) sediments from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Hole 696B in the northwestern Weddell Sea (Antarctica). The grains are K2O-rich (~7 wt%) and formed by smectite-poor interstratified ~10 Å glauconite-smectite with flaky/ rosette-shaped surface nanostructures. Two glaucony types reflect an evolved (types 1 and 2 glaucony; less mature to mature) stage and long term glauconitization, attesting to the glaucony grains being formed in situ, whereas the third type (type 3 glaucony) shows evidences of alteration and reworking from nearby areas. Conditions for the glaucony authigenesis occurred in an open-shelf environment deeper than 50 m, under sub-oxic conditions near the sediment-water interface. These environmental conditions were triggered by low sedimentation rates and recurrent winnowing action by bottomcurrents, leading to stratigraphic condensation. The condensed glaucony-bearing section provides an overview of continuous sea-level rise conditions pre-dating the onset of Antarctic glaciation during the Eocene-Oligocene transition. Sediment burial, drop of O2 levels, and ongoing reducing (postoxic ... |
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