Paleoenvironments and origin of the sedimentary phosphorites of the Napo Formation (Late Cretaceous, Oriente Basin, Ecuador) |
| |
Authors: | M.E. Brookfield D.P. Hemmings P. Van Straaten |
| |
Affiliation: | aInstitute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica, P.O. Box 1-55, Taipei 11529, Taiwan, ROC;bJacques Whitford Limited, 7271 Warden Avenue, Markham, ON, Canada L3R 5X5;cLand Resource Science, Guelph University, Guelph, ON, Canada NIG 2WI |
| |
Abstract: | The Napo phosphorites were deposited at the edge of a stable marine shelf during the Upper Cretaceous (Coniacian) oceanic anoxic event (OAE 3) at the transition from bioclastic limestone to organic-rich shale facies. Phosphogenesis was triggered in the shelf margin environment by a number of factors including strong upwelling currents, high biological activity, plankton blooms, and large amounts of organic matter production and subsequent accumulation. Dissolved phosphate levels increased in the sediment from a combination of anoxic conditions and microbial activity. Once dissolved phosphate concentrations were high enough, apatite began to form around nucleic sites including mineral grains, shells, wood fragments, and foraminifera tests forming peloidal fluorine rich carbonate fluoroapatite (francolite). As the peloids formed, sedimentation continued and dissolved phosphate concentrations diminished. A period of minor winnowing ensued, and as dissolved phosphate concentrations remained low, shale layers were deposited separating the various phosphate layers. |
| |
Keywords: | Paleoenvironments Origin Napo Phosphorites Late Cretaceous Ecuador |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|