Abstract

Investigations on the reconstruction of processes and facies relationships from submarine volcanics of Devonian age in the Lahn syncline (Rhenish Mountains, Western Germany) reveal a complex development of secondary alteration. This is well illustrated by a mafic pyroclastic sequence (»Schalstein«) at the Gansberg near Weilburg where alteration processes are visible by petrographic and geochemical means and can be further classified by cathodoluminescence. Iron ore formation of Lahn-Dill type is recognized as part of this alteration process, resulting from diagenetic seeping. Until recently a direct magmatic source for the Lahn-Dill type iron ore has been the generally accepted model. These bodies have therefore been viewed as a rather unique stratiform deposit, whose occurrence was virtually confined to this type area. However, it is here considered that the formation of the iron ore corresponds well with existing models of alteration processes within recent oceanic environments which are of a more universal occurrence.

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