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Nondestructive spectroscopic and petrochemical investigations of Paleoarchean spherule layers from the ICDP drill core BARB5, Barberton Mountain Land,South Africa
Authors:Jörg Fritz  Roald Tagle  Luisa Ashworth  Ralf Thomas Schmitt  Axel Hofmann  Béatrice Luais  Phillip D. Harris  Desirée Hoehnel  Seda Özdemir  Tanja Mohr‐Westheide  Christian Koeberl
Affiliation:1. Saalbau Weltraum Projekt, Heppenheim, Germany;2. Museum für Naturkunde—Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Berlin, Germany;3. Bruker‐Nano GmbH, Berlin, Germany;4. GeoSpectral Imaging, Johannesburg, South Africa;5. Department of Geology, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa;6. Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et Géochimiques, CRPG UMR 7358 CNRS‐UL, France;7. Institut für Erd und Umweltwissenschaften, Universit?t Potsdam, Potsdam‐Golm, Germany;8. Department of Lithospheric Research, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;9. Institut für Geologische Wissenschaften, Freie Universit?t Berlin (FU Berlin), Berlin, Germany;10. Natural History Museum, Vienna, Austria
Abstract:A Paleoarchean impact spherule‐bearing interval of the 763 m long International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) drill core BARB5 from the lower Mapepe Formation of the Fig Tree Group, Barberton Mountain Land (South Africa) was investigated using nondestructive analytical techniques. The results of visual observation, infrared (IR) spectroscopic imaging, and micro‐X‐ray fluorescence (μXRF) of drill cores are presented. Petrographic and sedimentary features, as well as major and trace element compositions of lithologies from the micrometer to kilometer‐scale, assisted in the localization and characterization of eight spherule‐bearing intervals between 512.6 and 510.5 m depth. The spherule layers occur in a strongly deformed section between 517 and 503 m, and the rocks in the core above and below are clearly less disturbed. The μXRF element maps show that spherule layers have similar petrographic and geochemical characteristics but differences in (1) sorting of two types of spherules and (2) occurrence of primary minerals (Ni‐Cr spinel and zircon). We favor a single impact scenario followed by postimpact reworking, and subsequent alteration. The spherule layers are Al2O3‐rich and can be distinguished from the Al2O3‐poor marine sediments by distinct Al‐OH absorption features in the short wave infrared (SWIR) region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Infrared images can cover tens to hundreds of square meters of lithologies and, thus, may be used to search for Al‐OH‐rich spherule layers in Al2O3‐poor sediments, such as Eoarchean metasediments, where the textural characteristics of the spherule layers are obscured by metamorphism.
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