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HUFF, WARREN D., BERGSTRÖM, STIG M., KOLATA, DENNIS R., SUN, HEPING (1998) The Lower Silurian Osmundsberg K-bentonite. Part II: mineralogy, geochemistry, chemostratigraphy and tectonomagmatic significance. Geological Magazine, 135 (1) 15-26 doi:10.1017/s001675689700811x

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleThe Lower Silurian Osmundsberg K-bentonite. Part II: mineralogy, geochemistry, chemostratigraphy and tectonomagmatic significance
JournalGeological Magazine
AuthorsHUFF, WARREN D.Author
BERGSTRÖM, STIG M.Author
KOLATA, DENNIS R.Author
SUN, HEPINGAuthor
Year1998 (January)Volume135
Issue1
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
DOIdoi:10.1017/s001675689700811xSearch in ResearchGate
Generate Citation Formats
Mindat Ref. ID257562Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:257562:3
GUID0
Full ReferenceHUFF, WARREN D., BERGSTRÖM, STIG M., KOLATA, DENNIS R., SUN, HEPING (1998) The Lower Silurian Osmundsberg K-bentonite. Part II: mineralogy, geochemistry, chemostratigraphy and tectonomagmatic significance. Geological Magazine, 135 (1) 15-26 doi:10.1017/s001675689700811x
Plain TextHUFF, WARREN D., BERGSTRÖM, STIG M., KOLATA, DENNIS R., SUN, HEPING (1998) The Lower Silurian Osmundsberg K-bentonite. Part II: mineralogy, geochemistry, chemostratigraphy and tectonomagmatic significance. Geological Magazine, 135 (1) 15-26 doi:10.1017/s001675689700811x
In(1998, January) Geological Magazine Vol. 135 (1) Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract/NotesThe Lower Silurian Osmundsberg K-bentonite is a

widespread ash bed that occurs throughout

Baltoscandia and parts of northern Europe. This paper describes

its characteristics at its type locality in the

Province of Dalarna, Sweden. It contains mineralogical and

chemical characteristics that permit its regional

correlation in sections elsewhere in Sweden as well as Norway,

Estonia, Denmark and Great Britain. The

<2 μm clay fraction of the Osmundsberg bed contains

abundant kaolinite in addition to randomly ordered

(RO) illite/smectite (I/S). Modelling of the X-ray

diffraction tracings showed the I/S consists of 18% illite

and 82% smectite. The high smectite and kaolinite content is

indicative of a history with minimal burial

temperatures. Analytical data from both pristine melt inclusions

in primary quartz grains as well as whole

rock samples can be used to constrain both the parental magma

composition and the probable tectonic setting

of the source volcanoes. The parental ash was dacitic to

rhyolitic in composition and originated in a tectonically

active collision margin setting.Whole rock chemical fingerprinting of coeval beds elsewhere

in Baltoscandia produced a pronounced

clustering of these samples in the Osmundsberg field of the

discriminant analysis diagram. This, together

with well-constrained biostratigraphic and lithostratigraphic

data, provides the basis for regional correlation

and supports the conclusion that the Osmundsberg K-bentonite is

one of the most extensive fallout ash beds

in the early Phanerozoic. The source volcano probably lay to

the west of Baltica as part of the subduction

complex associated with the closure of Iapetus.


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