Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep Slopes

For a long time, particular attention was paid to glauconitization in the surficial sediments lying on the outer continental shelves of present oceans. Subsequently, the processes observed and analyzed may have served as models for studies of glauconite in Cenozoic or even Mesozoic shelf deposits. A...

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Main Author: Pierre Giresse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-07-01
Series:Minerals
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-163X/12/7/908
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author Pierre Giresse
author_facet Pierre Giresse
author_sort Pierre Giresse
collection DOAJ
description For a long time, particular attention was paid to glauconitization in the surficial sediments lying on the outer continental shelves of present oceans. Subsequently, the processes observed and analyzed may have served as models for studies of glauconite in Cenozoic or even Mesozoic shelf deposits. Access to the sedimentary domains of deep oceans, particularly those of contouritic accumulation fields, has made it possible to discover unexpected processes of glauconitization. Thus, the long-term prevalence of control using fairly high-temperature water has become obsolete, and the prerequisite influence of continental flows has come to be considered on a new scale. Frequently, sediments from contouritic accumulation provide a condensed and undisturbed sedimentary record without periods of sediment erosion. Glauconitic grains could possibly integrate the signatures of bottom-water masses over prolonged periods of time, which, while preventing their use in high-resolution studies, would provide an effective means of yielding reliable average estimates on past ε<i>Nd</i> signatures of bottom-water masses. In this regard, glauconitic grains are probably better-suited to paleoceanographic reconstructions than foraminifera and leached Fe-oxyhydroxide fractions, which appear to be influenced by sediment redistribution and the presence of terrestrial continental Fe-oxides, respectively. Direct methodological access to the compositions of the semi-confined microenvironments of neoformation has largely renewed the information, chemical or crystallographic, that was previously, and for a long time, restricted to macromeasurements. The various granular supports (mudclasts, fecal pellets, and foraminifera infillings) include inherited 1:1 clays (or Te-Oc; i.e., clay minerals consisting of one tetrahedral sheet and one octahedral sheet, such as kaolinite) that are gradually replaced by 2:1 clays (Te-Oc-Te) dominated first by smectite, and then by glauconite. In small pores, the water’s activity is diminished; as a consequence, the precipitation of a great number of mineral species is thereby made easier, and their stability domains are changed. A specific methodological approach allows the study of the mineralogy and chemistry of the fine-scale mineral phases and to avoid the global aspect of the analytical methods previously used in the initial studies. Wide-field micrographs taken at a mean direct magnification of 100.000 show the intimate and characteristic organization of the main phases that occur in a single grain. One or several “fine” (about 10 nanometers in scale) microchemical analyses can be recorded, and directly coupled with each interesting and well-identified structure image observed in HRTEM.
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spelling doaj.art-44ae36caad72408dadf0307d404c9d942023-12-03T12:00:28ZengMDPI AGMinerals2075-163X2022-07-0112790810.3390/min12070908Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep SlopesPierre Giresse0Centre of Education and Research on Mediterranean Environments (CEFREM), UMR CNRS 5110, Perpignan Via Domitia University, 66860 Perpignan, FranceFor a long time, particular attention was paid to glauconitization in the surficial sediments lying on the outer continental shelves of present oceans. Subsequently, the processes observed and analyzed may have served as models for studies of glauconite in Cenozoic or even Mesozoic shelf deposits. Access to the sedimentary domains of deep oceans, particularly those of contouritic accumulation fields, has made it possible to discover unexpected processes of glauconitization. Thus, the long-term prevalence of control using fairly high-temperature water has become obsolete, and the prerequisite influence of continental flows has come to be considered on a new scale. Frequently, sediments from contouritic accumulation provide a condensed and undisturbed sedimentary record without periods of sediment erosion. Glauconitic grains could possibly integrate the signatures of bottom-water masses over prolonged periods of time, which, while preventing their use in high-resolution studies, would provide an effective means of yielding reliable average estimates on past ε<i>Nd</i> signatures of bottom-water masses. In this regard, glauconitic grains are probably better-suited to paleoceanographic reconstructions than foraminifera and leached Fe-oxyhydroxide fractions, which appear to be influenced by sediment redistribution and the presence of terrestrial continental Fe-oxides, respectively. Direct methodological access to the compositions of the semi-confined microenvironments of neoformation has largely renewed the information, chemical or crystallographic, that was previously, and for a long time, restricted to macromeasurements. The various granular supports (mudclasts, fecal pellets, and foraminifera infillings) include inherited 1:1 clays (or Te-Oc; i.e., clay minerals consisting of one tetrahedral sheet and one octahedral sheet, such as kaolinite) that are gradually replaced by 2:1 clays (Te-Oc-Te) dominated first by smectite, and then by glauconite. In small pores, the water’s activity is diminished; as a consequence, the precipitation of a great number of mineral species is thereby made easier, and their stability domains are changed. A specific methodological approach allows the study of the mineralogy and chemistry of the fine-scale mineral phases and to avoid the global aspect of the analytical methods previously used in the initial studies. Wide-field micrographs taken at a mean direct magnification of 100.000 show the intimate and characteristic organization of the main phases that occur in a single grain. One or several “fine” (about 10 nanometers in scale) microchemical analyses can be recorded, and directly coupled with each interesting and well-identified structure image observed in HRTEM.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-163X/12/7/908glauconiteshelfcontouritic slopeswinnowingironGulf of Guinea
spellingShingle Pierre Giresse
Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep Slopes
Minerals
glauconite
shelf
contouritic slopes
winnowing
iron
Gulf of Guinea
title Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep Slopes
title_full Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep Slopes
title_fullStr Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep Slopes
title_full_unstemmed Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep Slopes
title_short Quaternary Glauconitization on Gulf of Guinea, Glauconite Factory: Overview of and New Data on Tropical Atlantic Continental Shelves and Deep Slopes
title_sort quaternary glauconitization on gulf of guinea glauconite factory overview of and new data on tropical atlantic continental shelves and deep slopes
topic glauconite
shelf
contouritic slopes
winnowing
iron
Gulf of Guinea
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-163X/12/7/908
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