Abstract
Within outcrops of the black Utica shales south of the Mohawk
Valley narrow re-entrants parallel with stratification are
visible, often accompanied -by a marked orange-staining of the
underlying strata. These rentrant features indicate the presence
of bentonites weathered back faster then the enclosing shales.
These bentonites are presumably magmatic ashes related to
extensive volcanism when an island arc collided with the North
American continent in the late Ordovician about 450 million years
ago (Taconic orogeny).
Bentonites are good stratigraphic markers because of the short
time-interval they represent and the large area they cover.
Therefore they are commonly used as correlation tools. In this
study an attempt was made to use the minerals (i.e. garnets) as a
correlation tool in contrast to earlier attempts to correlate
bentonites by chemical fingerprinting using bulk chemistry (Huff,
1986; Kolata et al., 1986, 1987).
The mineral content of these bentonites was separated and
analyzed. In this study special attention was paid to the garnets
and garnet-bearing rock fragments. The garnets were analyzed using
an electron microprobe for major elements and trace elements, i.e.
Ti, Sc, Zn and Y. In the single crystals as well as in the rock
fragments two groups of garnets are observed: (1) pink grains
containing 0.4-5 mol.% grossular, 56-79 mol.% almandine, 12-40
mol.% pyrope, 1-5 mol.% spessartine, and <2.2 mol.% andradite;
and (2) dark grains containing 14-24 mol.% grossular, 48-76 mol.%
almandine, 2-35 mol.% pyrope, 1-9 mol.% spessartine, and <7
mol.% andradite.
For the trace elements some general trends are observed,
especially a positive correlation of TiO2 with CaO, with up to
1150 ppm TiO2 in the CaO-rich garnets. A negative correlation of
Sc and CaO is observed, leading to higher amounts of Sc (100-200
ppm) in the CaO-poor garnets compared to the CaO-rich garnets
which contain generally less than 100 ppm Sc. Yttrium does not
show a distinct behavior with changing CaO content, but it appears
to favor slightly garnets with higher CaO content.
Geothermobarometry calculations (Berman and Perkins, 1987;
Lindsley and Anderson, 1983; Ellis and Green, 1979; Fuhrman and
Lindsley, 1988; Ghent, 1976; Kohn and Spears, 1990) were attempted
on rock fragments with suitable mineral assemblages. Calculated
temperatures and pressures included: (1) 600ºC on pyroxene pairs;
(2) 605-625ºC and 6.5-7.5 kbar on a rock fragment containing
garnet-hornblende-quartz-plagioclase; (3) 450-550ºC on feldspars;
(4) 600-650ºC on clinopyroxene-garnet pairs; and (5) pressures of
4.5 kbar at 600ºC for the assemblage garnet-
plagioclase-aluminosilicate and quartz, which support the view
that the garnets and rock fragments are derived from a metamorphic
source of about granulite-facies grade.
The incorporation of xenocrysts and xenoliths into the bentonites
can be explained by the disruption and integration of
Grenville-like crust into the ash during eruption. This
explanation is consistent with the ages derived from a K-feldspar
aliquot of one of the bentonites using the Ar/Ar method of dating,
which shows a thermal history similar to Grenville crust
K-feldspars and an age of 550-750 million years. This is too old
to be derived from metamorphism during the Taconic event, nor can
these feldspars be explained as authigenic phases; therefore, the
best explanation is a different source than the volcanism at 450
million years, and a minimum age for this source of 750 million
years, and probably older.
The subject of this investigation is split into two parts: (1)
Garnets as means of correlation and (2) garnets as indicators for
the source of the magmas creating the bentonites. Both lines of
investigation were unsuccessful. The xenocrystic garnets in the
bentonites cannot be used for correlation purposes and are also of
very limited use to define a source area because of their
metamorphic character.
Bock, B., 1990. Geochemistry of garnet xenocrysts and
garnet-bearing xenoliths in Ordovician bentonites. Unpublished
MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany. 113 pp., +x
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE
Oversize (*) QE 40 Z899 1990 B63
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