Title of article :
Clay mineral facies and lateritization in basalts of the southeastern Parana Basin, Brazil
Author/Authors :
de Oliveira، نويسنده , , M.T.G. and Formoso، نويسنده , , M.L.L. and Trescases، نويسنده , , J.J. and Meunier، نويسنده , , A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Seventeen samples from two lateritic profiles, each with five facies, were studied. These profiles occur on the old planation surface of the plateau basalts of the southern part of ParanáBasin, Brazil. Optical microscopy, X-ray diffraction, electron microprobe, Mössbauer spectroscopy and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectra were used to obtain information about the nature and chemical composition of each weathering facies. In addition, scanning electron microscopy and analyses of clay minerals were performed to detect microcrystalline environmental changes. Both profiles have two major parts: a loose red-clay latosol separated from an underlying mottled clay and an alterite facies; a stone line may or may not be present between the latosol and the underlying units. In both profiles the latosol consists principally of kaolinite, hematite and goethite. Two alterite facies, shaped by differential weathering, are also present in the lower profile: a halloysite–nontronite clayey matrix with a well developed fissure system occurs in the argillaceous alterite and a network of Al–goethite aggregates is typical of the highly porous cortex of the boulder alterite that is found in the stone line and below it. Gibbsite has crystallized in the large pores of porphyritic boulder alterite but is absent in the small pores of the subaphyric boulder alterite. Clay minerals observed in fissures include halloysite associated with goethite and manganese oxides. The basalt has hydrothermal green-clays (mixed layers and trioctahedral smectites) that formed between primary plagioclase, pyroxene and Ti–magnetite crystals while fresh corestones of the boulder alterite have cryptocrystalline iron-rich material. The study of these profiles shows one principal evolutionary trend for clay minerals. This trend is from smectite and mixed layers that form green clays in altered bedrock at the base of the profile to an intermediate association of nontronite and halloysite in the argillaceous alterite to kaolinite in the mottled clay facies at the top of the profile. There is also another trend; the presence of a cryptocrystalline material sequence in the weathering of the corestones. This study of two polycyclic profiles developed on basalts shows the presence of iron-rich laterites in the southern ParanáBasin which are closely similar to the laterites in the northern part of the ParanáBasin.
Journal title :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
Journal title :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences