Dudley, W. C. and Margolis, S. V. (1975): Authigenic and detrital "glauconie" encountered in Leg 29 sediments

Leg/Site/Hole:
DSDP 29
Identifier:
1976-016989
georefid

10.2973/dsdp.proc.29.136.1975
doi

Creator:
Dudley, W. C.
Univ. Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
author

Margolis, S. V.
author

Identification:
Authigenic and detrital "glauconie" encountered in Leg 29 sediments
1975
Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project
Texas A & M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
29
Lyttleton, N. Z. to Wellington, N. Z.; March-April 1973
1093-1096
The term "glauconie" refers to any of a number of green clay minerals ranging from the mineral glauconite with an ordered or disordered dioctahedral micaceous lattice to a variable mixture of illite, montmorillonite, or chlorite. In the literature the depths of glauconie occurrence have been described as being restricted to between 30 and 2000 m. Various modes of formation of glauconie have been outlined including neoformation inside foraminifera shells and transformation of biotite. The study of sediments from DSDP Leg 29 revealed the occurrence of glauconie in significant amounts at sites 275, 277, 280, 280 (Hole 280A), and 281, showing a depth range from 1200 to 4200 m. At these sites the occurrence of glauconie includes detrital grains, internal molds and fillings in foraminifera, and transformed biotite.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-30.0000
West:143.0000East: 177.0000
South:-57.0000

Oceanography; authigenic; Cenozoic; chemical composition; composition; Deep Sea Drilling Project; detrital; environmental analysis; genesis; geochemistry; glauconie; glauconite; glauconitic; Leg 29; marine geology; mica group; mineralogy; minerals; Pacific Ocean; rates; sedimentation; sediments; sheet silicates; silicates; South Pacific; southwest; Southwest Pacific; Tasman Sea; West Pacific;

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