Minerals in the Triassic carbonaceous silicites of Sikhote Alin
- Autores: Volokhin Y.G.1, Karabtsov A.A.1
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Afiliações:
- Far East Geological Institute, Far East Branch
- Edição: Volume 51, Nº 5 (2016)
- Páginas: 405-424
- Seção: Article
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/0024-4902/article/view/162455
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0024490216050047
- ID: 162455
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Resumo
Over 60 minerals, including native elements, intermetallic compounds, haloids, sulfides, sulfates, arsenides, oxides and hydroxides, silicates, borosilicates, wolframates, phosphates and REE phosphates, were established in Triassic siliceous rocks of Sikhote Alin. Allothigenic and authigenic minerals in the carbonaceous silicites were formed over a long period through several stages. Judging from morphology, chemical composition, and structural position, K-feldspar (K-Fsp), illite, kaolinite, metahalloysite, monazite, xenotime, zircon, rutile, or its polymorphs are the disintegration products of sialic rocks of continental crust. Authigenic sulfides are dominated by diagenetic pyrite (fine-crystalline, microglobular, framboidal, as well as those developed after biogenic siliceous and carbonate fragments), which has been formed prior to precipitation of siliceous cement and lithification of siliceous rocks. Most of other sulfides (sphalerite, galena, chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, argentite, pentlandite, antimonite, ulmanite, and bravoite), arsenides and sulfoarsenides (arsenopyrite, nickeline, skutterudite, cobaltite, glaucodot, and gersdorffite), wolframates (scheelite and wolframite), intermetallides (Cu2Zn, Cu3Zn2, Cu3Zn, Cu4Zn, CuSn, Cu4Sn, Cu8Sn, Cu4Zn2Ni, Ni2Cu2Zn, Ni4Cd), and native elements (Au, Pd, Ag, Cu, Fe, W, Ni, Se) were crystallized later (during catagenesis after the lithification and brecciation of siliceous beds) from metals involved in the easily mobile fractions of bitumens. Supergene mineral formation was mainly expressed in the sulfide oxidation and replacement of diagenetic pyrite by jarosite and iron hydroxides.
Sobre autores
Yu. Volokhin
Far East Geological Institute, Far East Branch
Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: yvolokhin@mail.ru
Rússia, pr. Stoletiya Vladivostoka 159, Vladivostok, 690022
A. Karabtsov
Far East Geological Institute, Far East Branch
Email: yvolokhin@mail.ru
Rússia, pr. Stoletiya Vladivostoka 159, Vladivostok, 690022
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