Abstract

Two small, alluvial-lacustrine subbasins developed during the early restraining overstep stages of the Oligocene–Miocene As Pontes strike-slip Basin (NW Spain). Later, the basin evolved into a restraining bend stage and an alluvial-swamp-dominated depositional framework developed. The palaeobiological record demonstrates that the Oligocene–Miocene palaeoclimate in NW Spain was subtropical, warm and humid to subhumid. The metamorphic and igneous basin catchment yielded clay assemblages made up by kaolinite, illite and Al-smectite. Illite occurred as an original mineral in the source rock area, whereas kaolinite and Al-smectite resulted mainly from weathering of feldspar and clinochlore, respectively. This detrital primary clay assemblage remained preserved in the colluvial, alluvial fan and shallow lacustrine facies, whose early diagenesis was influenced by diluted, poorly evolved pore waters with neutral to slightly alkaline pH. The original clay assemblage was mildly to strongly transformed under early diagenetic conditions in the lacustrine and swampy environments where significant hydrochemical and Eh–pH changes took place. A fibrous magnesium-rich clay mineral-dominated assemblage (palygorskite and sepiolite) formed in shallow, saline lakes and palustrine zones under the influence of magnesium-rich, alkaline waters. Moreover, kaolinite-enriched assemblages formed in deep lacustrine, swamp and swamp-related alluvial zones under the influence of slightly to highly acidic pore waters. Pore water acidic conditions, characterising environments with organic matter accumulation, led to early diagenetic transformation of Al-smectite into kaolinite. This process was relatively limited in some environments such as organic matter-rich bottoms in meromictic lacustrine zones, whereas it was pervasive in peat-forming swamp zones. The stratigraphic relationships between the diverse clay mineral assemblages in the As Pontes Basin fill demonstrate the coeval development of rather diverse clay compositions. This clearly reflects the influence on clay assemblages of palaeoenvironmental changes forced by the morphological and tectonic evolution of the catchment–basin system. The interplay between climate and tectonic processes in the source areas did not result in major variations of the clay minerals fed into the basin. Conversely, this tectonic-sedimentation interplay influenced the evolution of the drainage and the water balance in the depositional zones, causing a complex environmental–hydrochemical evolution to occur. As a consequence, drastic early diagenetic changes affected the original clay mineral assemblages and resulted in a variety of early diagenetic assemblages. The As Pontes case study emphasises the major influence of palaeogeographical and tectonosedimentary evolution on the clay mineral record in nonmarine depositional systems. The depositional record in As Pontes Basin demonstrates that morphological and tectonically forced environmental and hydrochemical changes can result in variations similar to those forced by low-order climatic changes and that, in some cases, the role of climate can be negligible.

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