The Origin Of Some Phosphatic Minerals In Coastal Plain Sediments

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
John K. Adams
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
305 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1972

Abstract

Phosphorus may be incorporated into sedimentary rocks in at least four different ways: (1) by the accumulation of detrital mineral fragments, (2) by the accumulation of phosphatic organic debris, (3) by diagenesis and (4) perhaps by the primary precipitation of calcium phosphate. Based-on the petrographic examination of Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments from the northern and central parts of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, Diagenesis is the most important of these mechanisms. Both syndiagenesis and epidiagenesis are required to explain the origin of all the diagenetic phosphate mineral species which occur in the northern and central parts of the coastal plain. Syndiagenesis produced much of the coastal plain's apatite. It was operative below the sediment-water interface while the substrate was being compacted. Compaction forced pore waters, which were enriched in phosphate by the decomposition of organic matter, upward through calcareous sediments. The PO43- radicle replaced the CO23- and calcareous nodules, pellets and shell fragments were converted to apatite. Epidiagenetic reactions occurred in the subaerial environment where downward percolating meteoric waters carried phosphate in solution to cites where cation activity was sufficiently high to form new minerals. Vivianite may form where ferrous iron is available and wavellite and variscite may form in the presence of aluminum rich minerals. Textural evidence suggests that many of the reactions were repeated. The present day appearance of apatite, vivianite, wavellite and variscite in the coastal plain may represent several generations of diagenesis.
Citation

APA: John K. Adams  (1972)  The Origin Of Some Phosphatic Minerals In Coastal Plain Sediments

MLA: John K. Adams The Origin Of Some Phosphatic Minerals In Coastal Plain Sediments. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1972.

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