期刊
SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
卷 331, 期 -, 页码 162-169出版社
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2015.11.006
关键词
Shale; Mudstone; Shale lithic; Sediment transport; Shale fabric; Depositional history
类别
资金
- Indiana University Shale Research Consortium
- US National Science Foundation [OCE-0930829]
Detailed petrographic studies of shales show that they consist of a wide range of components, including a wide spectrum of composite particles that were contributed to the precursor muds in the form of high-water-content suspended floccules, bedload floccules, rip-up intraclasts, pedogenic aggregates, and fully lithified shale clasts. Experimental studies show that shale clasts of sand to silt size (shale lithics) can survive hundreds to thousands of kilometers of bedload transport. Observations of modem river and shelf muds reveal the common presence of shale lithics in these sediments, and suggest that a significant portion of ancient shale formations could potentially consist of reworked shale lithics and not, as commonly assumed, of primary composite particles such as clay floccules and organo-minerallic aggregates. Identification of shale lithics in the rock record presents challenges, but careful petrographic examination (using SEM and ion-milled samples) and case studies will help to develop robust criteria for recognition. The presented observations have manifold implications for the interpretation of many aspects of shales: mud transport and accumulation, sediment compaction and basin-fill modeling, and geochemical proxies. They emphasize the essential need for petrographic examination of shale samples before more advanced analyses are undertaken. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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