Abstract
This paper reports the minerals in an argillized tuff from the Lvshuidong mine, Huayingshan Coalfield, southwestern China. The clay assemblages of the samples are mainly kaolinite, varying proportions of illite and trace chlorite. Other minerals include various proportions of pyrite, small proportions of carbonates (calcite and ankerite), anatase, rutile, hematite, florencite and rare analcite. The clay mineralogy of the tuff profile changes vertically due to the change in the depositional environment. Although illite is minor in the middle and lower parts of the profile, it is relatively abundant in a few topmost samples where the proportion of illite is comparable to that of kaolinite. This is probably because the original volcanic ash was mainly deposited in a continental environment, but marine water may have percolated to the uppermost layers of the ash bed during early diagenesis, leading to the formation of concretions of concentric rings of kaolinite and illite. The samples of this study are derived from alkali mafic volcanic ash with relatively high concentrations of critical metals, including Nb, Ta, Zr, Hf, rare earth elements and Y.
Highlights
The Emeishan flood volcanism results in dominant basaltic lavas and subordinate pyroclastic rocks, and flows and tuff of trachytic and rhyolitic composition in the west sub-province [1,2,3]
The relationship between the chemistry of high temperature ashes (HTAs) and mineralogy was studied to check the reliability of the quantitative X-ray diffraction (XRD) data, following the calculation procedure described by
A previous study [9] suggested that the tuff immediately underlying the K1 coal seam in the Lvshuidong mine is mainly composed of kaolinite and siderite, and this is thought to indicate the deposition of the mafic volcanic ash mainly under non-marine or at least weakly-marine conditions
Summary
The Emeishan flood volcanism results in dominant basaltic lavas and subordinate pyroclastic rocks, and flows and tuff of trachytic and rhyolitic composition in the west sub-province [1,2,3]. To the east of the Kangdian Upland, within the central Emeishan large igneous province, a tuff occurs as a possibly correlative band in a wide area covering western Yunnan, southern. The thickness of the tuff varies from 0.2–21 m, commonly 3–5 m [4], representing a pyroclastic fall associated with the Emeishan flood volcanism. Kramer et al [5] showed that tuff bands from the Sydney Basin represent several cycles of eruptive activity and deposition resulting in a combination of pyroclastic fall, flow and surge with different chemical fingerprints.
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