Elemental and K-Ar Isotopic Signatures of Glauconite/Celadonite Pellets from a Metallic Deposit of Missouri: Genetic Implications for the Local Deposits


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Clauer N., UYSAL I. T., Aubert A.

GEOSCIENCES, vol.12, no.10, 2022 (ESCI) identifier identifier

  • Publication Type: Article / Article
  • Volume: 12 Issue: 10
  • Publication Date: 2022
  • Doi Number: 10.3390/geosciences12100387
  • Journal Name: GEOSCIENCES
  • Journal Indexes: Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI), Scopus, Academic Search Premier, Directory of Open Access Journals
  • Keywords: glauconite pellets, major and trace elemental compositions, K-Ar isotopic dating, Cambrian Bonneterre Formation, Mississippi Valley Type deposits, Missouri U, LEAD-ZINC DEPOSITS, RB-SR, SOUTHEAST MISSOURI, CATION DISTRIBUTION, VIBURNUM-TREND, ORE-DEPOSITS, GLAUCONITE, AGE, ORIGIN, EXPLANATION
  • Open Archive Collection: AVESIS Open Access Collection
  • Istanbul University Affiliated: No

Abstract

In the course of attempting to date the host rocks of Viburnum metal deposits from the US state of Missouri, the purpose was here a detailed examination and contribution of the constitutive minerals of glauconite-rich pellets to the isotopic dating of these deposits. The glauconite pellets of Cambrian sediments hosting metal concentrates were dated here by the K-Ar method to complement earlier published Rb-Sr data. The study confirmed that the preparation and purification step of such glauconite pellets is especially critical with the need for a specific cleaning step to not only remove the detrital counterparts but also all Sr-rich components occurring as accessory minerals such as the carbonates, sulfates and oxides that apparently "contaminated" the Rb-Sr results. The K-Ar data and the previously released Rb-Sr results obtained on strictly the same glauconite-rich separates outline clear age discrepancies that can be summarized by higher, "older" K-Ar age data at about 440, 415 and 390 Ma, and lower, "younger" Rb-Sr data at about 400 and 370 Ma. The glauconite separates of most samples being apparently not contaminated by various detrital K-rich crystals, the two dating methods should have been affected similarly. The analytical dispersion seems, then, to result from a diagenetic event that affected the Rb-Sr system more than the K-Ar system by a plausible addition/subtraction of one or several Sr-rich and Rb-poor and, therefore, K-poor minerals. In turn, the studied pellets were apparently impregnated after deposition by flowing metal-rich fluids in a low-temperature environment not affected by a significant thermal impact. The Bonneterre Formation acted apparently as a regional drain for metal-rich fluids that percolated throughout the region at a probable burial depth of less than 2000 m.