Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T04:12:59.590Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Stratigraphic variations in mudstone mineral assemblages from a submarine fan-complex: Karoo Basin, South Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2018

P. O. D. Andersson
Affiliation:
Department of Geology and Geochemistry, Stockholm University, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
R. H. Worden*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of Liverpool, Brownlow Street, Liverpool L69 3GP, UK
*

Abstract

Despite the high-grade diagenesis experienced by the Skoorsteenberg Formation mudstones, Tanqua Karoo basin, South Africa, geochemical data have been interpreted to reveal primary mineralogy and so help understand provenance evolution. The geochemical signatures show systematic variations related to stratigraphy. The main changes in mudstones from the lower to the upper part of the section include: (1) an increase in the feldspar content of the primary sediment and a decrease in the content of Al-rich clay (probably dioctahedral smectite); (2) a decrease in the degree of chemical weathering of the sediment, representing a change to a dryer and/or cooler climate; (3) an increase in TiO2/Al2O3 representing increasing mafic sources; (4) an increase in CaO/(K2O+CaO) also possibly representing increasing mafic sources. Mass flux and differential diagenesis are unlikely to be responsible for the depth-related changes since the rocks have undergone the same degree of high-grade diagenesis and the mudstones are interrupted by other lithologies, so disturbing any sort of diffusion gradient. These variations could plausibly be the result of one or more of differential weathering, evolving provenance characteristics or variable hydrodynamic fractionation of the sediment. The ratio of Zr/Y, a possible indicator of hydrodynamic fractionation, increases only slightly and irregularly up-section. There is no relationship between the silica content, representative of the quartz-silt content of the sediment, and TiO2/Al2O3 showing that the amount of quartz, and so the degree of hydrodynamic fractionation, has not controlled mudstone geochemistry. The stratigraphic increase in feldspar content, the decrease in Al-rich clay content and increase of both TiO2/Al2O3 and CaO/(K2O+CaO) must be due to a combination of marginally evolving provenance characteristics (more mafic and felsic rocks exposed to weathering with time) and changes in the degree of rock weathering (less chemical weathering with time).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Andersson, P.O.D. & Worden, R.H. (2004) Mudstones of the Tanqua Basin, South Africa: an analysis of lateral and stratigraphic variations within mudstones and a comparison of mudstones within and between turbidite fans. Sedimentology, 51, 479502.Google Scholar
Andersson, P.O.D., Johansson, A. & Kumpulainen, R.A. (2003) Sm-Nd isotope evidence for the provenance of the Skoorsteenberg Formation, Karoo Supergroup, South Africa. Journal of African Earth Sciences, 36, 173183.Google Scholar
Andersson, P.O.D., Worden, R.H., Hodgson, D. & Flint, S. (2004) Provenance evolution and chemostratigraphy of a Palaeozoic submarine fan complex: Tanqua Karoo Basin, South Africa. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 21, 555577.Google Scholar
Armstrong, R.A., de Wit, M.J., Reid, D., York, D. & Zartman, R. (1998) Cape Town's Table Mountain reveals rapid pan-African uplift of its basement rocks. Journal of African Earth Sciences, 27, 1011.Google Scholar
Bellon, A.S., Mosser, C , Roquin, C. & Pardo, E.S. (1994) Geochemical characterization of sedimentary basins by statistical analysis: the Mio-Pliocene sequences of the Vera Basin, SE Spain. Chemical Geology, 156, 523.Google Scholar
Bouma, A.H. & Wickens, H. de, V. (1994) Tanqua Karoo, ancient analog for fine-grained submarine fans. Pp. 2334 in: Submarine Fans and Turbidite Systems (P. Weimar, A.H. Bouma, & Perkins, B. F., editors). GCSSEPM Foundation 15t Annual Research Conference, December 47, 1994.Google Scholar
Brown, R., Gallagher, K. & Duane, M. (1994) A quantitative assessment of the effects of magmatism on the thermal history of the Karoo sedimentary sequence. Journal of African Earth Sciences, 18, 227243.Google Scholar
Cox, R , Lowe, D.R & Cullers, R.L. (1995) The influence of sediment recycling and basement composition on evolution of mudrock chemistry in the southwestern US. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 59, 29192940.Google Scholar
Da Silva, L.C., Gresse, P.G, Scheepers, R., McNaughton, N.J., Hartmann, L.A. & Fletcher, I. (2000) U-Pb and Sm-Nd age constraints on the timing and source of the Pan-African Cape Granite Suite, South Africa. Journal of African Earth Sciences, 30, 795815.Google Scholar
Dickinson, W.R. (1988) Provenance and sediment dispersal in relation to paleotectonics and paleogeography of sedimentary basins. Pp. 2742 in: New Perspectives in Basin Analysis ( K L . Kleinspehn & Paola, C., editors). Springer-Verlag, New York.Google Scholar
Elliot, D.H. & Johnson, M. (1972) The Gondwanide orogeny: new data from South Africa and the problem of the Falkland Island. Abstract Programs, Geological Society of America, 4, 498499.Google Scholar
Hilli, G., Worden, R.H. & Meighan, I.G. (2000a) Geochemical evolution of a palaeolaterite: the interbasaltic formation, Northern Ireland. Chemical Geology, 166, 6584.Google Scholar
Hilli, G., Worden, R.H. & Meighan, I.G. (2000b) Yttrium: the immobility-mobility transition during basaltic weathering. Geology, 28, 923926.Google Scholar
Hodgson, D.M., Flint, S.S., Hodgetts, D., Drinkwater, N.J., Johannessen, E.P. & Luthi, S.M. (2006) Stratigraphic evolution of fine-grained submarine fan systems, Tangua Depocentre, Karoo Basin, South Africa. Journal of Sedimentary Research, 76, 1939.Google Scholar
Jarvis, I. & Jarvis, K.E. (1992) Plasma spectrometry in the Earth sciences: techniques, applications and future trends. Chemical Geology, 95, 133.Google Scholar
Johnson, M.R. (1991) Sandstone petrography, provenance and plate tectonic setting in Gondwana context of the southeastern Cape-Karoo Basin. South African Journal of Geology, 94, 137154.Google Scholar
Johnson, M.R., van Vuuren, C.J., Hegenberger, W.F., Key, R. & Shoko, U. (1996) Stratigraphy of the Karoo Supergroup in southern Africa: an overview. Journal of African Earth Sciences, 23, 315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, S.J., Flint, S., Hinds, D. & Wickens, H. de, V. (2001) Anatomy, geometry and stratigraphy of basin floor to slope turbidite systems, Tanqua Karoo, South Africa. Sedimentology, 48, 9871023.Google Scholar
Land, L.S. & Milliken, K.L. (2000) Regional loss of SiO2 and CaCO3 and gain of K2O during burial diagenesis of Gulf Coast mudrocks. Pp. 183197 in: Quartz Cementation in Sandstones (Worden, R.H. & Morad, S., editors). Special Publication of the International Association of Sedimentologists, 29.Google Scholar
Land, L.S., Mack, L.E., Milliken, K.L. & Lynch, F.L. (1997) Burial diagenesis of argillaceous sediment, South Texas Gulf of Mexico sedimentary basin: areexamination. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 109, 215.Google Scholar
Luthi, S.M., Hodgson, D.M., Geel, C.R., Flint, S.S. Goedbloed, J.W., Drinkwater, N.J. & Johannessen, E.P. (2006) Contribution of research borehole data to modelling fine-grained turbidite reservoir analogues, Permian Tanqua-Karoo basin-floor fans (South Africa). Petroleum Geoscience, 12, 175190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nesbitt, H.W. & Young, G M. (1982) Early Proterozoic climates and plate motions inferred from major element chemistry of lutites. Nature, 299, 715717.Google Scholar
Nesbitt, H.W., MacRae, N D. & Kronberg, B.I. (1990) Amazon deep-sea fan muds: light REE enriched products of extreme chemical weathering. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 100, 118123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norry, M.J., Dunham, A.C. & Hudson, J.D. (1994) Mineralogy and geochemistry of the Peterborough member, Oxford Clay Formation, Jurassic, UK: element fractionation during mudrock sedimentation. Journal of the Geological Society, 151, 195207.Google Scholar
Pearce, T.J. & Jarvis, I. (1992) Applications of geochemical data to modelling sediment dispersal patterns in distal turbidites: late Quaternary turbidites, Madeira Abyssal Plain. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, 62, 11121129.Google Scholar
Pearce, T.J. & Jarvis, I. (1995) High-resolution chemostratigraphy of Quaternary distal turbidites: a case study of new methods for the analysis and correlation of barren sequences. Pp. 107143 in: Non-biostratigraphical Methods of Dating and Correlation (Dunay, RE. & Hailwood, EA., editors). Special Pubication, 89, Geological. Society of London.Google Scholar
Rowsell, D.M. & De Swardt, A.M.J. (1976) Diagenesis in Cape and Karoo sediments and its bearing on their hydrocarbon potential. Transactions of the Geological Society of South Africa, 79, 81129.Google Scholar
Rozendaal, A., Gresse, P.G, Scheepers, R & Le Roux, J.P. (1999) Neoproterozoic to early Cambrian crustal evolution of the Pan-African Saldania Belt, South Africa. Precambrian Research, 97, 303323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SACS, South African Committee for Stratigraphy, (1980) Stratigraphy of South Africa; Handbook 8; Part 1, Lithostratigraphy of the Republic of South Africa, South West Africa/Namibia and the republics of Bophuthatswana, Transkei and Venda. South Africa Geological Survey, Department of Mineral and Energy Affairs, Pretoria, South Africa.Google Scholar
Scott, E.D., Bouma, A.H. & Wickens, H. de, V. (2000) Influence of tectonics on submarine fan deposition, Tanqua and Lainsburg Subbasins, South Africa. Pp. 4756 in: Fine-grained Turbidite Systems (Bouma, A.H. & Stone, C.G, editors). AAPG Memoir 72/ SEPM Special Publication 68.Google Scholar
Taylor, S.R & McLennan, S.H. (1985) The Continental Crust: Its Composition and Evolution. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford.Google Scholar
Theron, J.N. (1969) The Baviaanskloof Range –a South African nappe. Transactions of the Geological Society of South Africa, 72, 2930.Google Scholar
Thompson, RN. (1982) Magmatism of the British Tertiary Volcanic province. Scottish Journal of Geology, 18, 50107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Velde, B. (1985) Clay Minerals. A Physico-Chemical Explanation of Their Occurrence. Developments in Sedimentology, 40, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 427 pp.Google Scholar
Visser, J.N.J. (1991) Geography and climatology of the late Carboniferous to Jurassic Karoo Basin in southwestern Gondwana. Annals of the South African Museum, 99, 415431.Google Scholar
Visser, J.N.J. (1992) Basin tectonics in southwestern Gondwana during the Carboniferous and Permian. Pp. 109116 in: Inversion Tectonics of the Cape Fold Belt, Karoo and Cretaceous Basins of Southern Africa (de Wit, M.J. & Ransome, I.G.D., editors). Balkema, Rotterdam.Google Scholar
Vital, H., Stattegger, K & Garbe-Schonberg, CD. (1999) Composition and trace-element geochemistry of detrital clay and heavy-mineral suites of the lowermost Amazon river: A provenance study. Journal of Sedimentary Research, A69, 563575.Google Scholar
Wickens, H. de, V. (1984) Die stratigrafie en sedimentologie van die Groep Ecca wes van Sutherland. MSc thesis (unpublished), University of Port Elisabeth, South Africa, 86 pp.Google Scholar
Wickens, H. de, V. (1992) Submarine fans of the Permian Ecca Group in the SW Karoo basin: Their origin and reflection on the tectonic evolution of the basin and its source areas. Pp. 117125 in: Inversion Tectonics of the Cape Fold Belt, Karoo and Cretaceous Basins of Southern Africa (M.J.de Wit, & Ransome, I.G.D., editors). Balkema, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Wickens, H. de, V. & Bouma, A. H. (2000) The Tanqua Fan complex, Karoo Basin, South Africa –outcrop analog for fine-grained deepwater deposits. Pp. 153164 in: Fine-grained Turbidite Systems (Bouma, A.H. & Stone, C.G., editors). AAPG Memoir 72/ SEPM Special Publication 68.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, M., Haszeldine, RS. & Milliken, K.L. (2003) Cross-formational flux of aluminium and potassium in Gulf Coast (USA) sediment. Pp. 147160 in: Clay Mineral Cements in Sandstones (Worden, RH. and Moard, S., editors). Special Publication ,34, International Association of Sedimentologists.Google Scholar