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Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
Vol. 53 (1983)No. 3. (September), Pages 911-930

Petrology and Diagenetic Changes of Neogene Siliceous Rocks in Northern Japan

Ryuji Tada, Azuma Iijima

ABSTRACT

Diagenetic changes in textures and mass properties of Neogene marine noncalcareous siliceous rocks corresponding to silica-phase transformations (opal-A ^rarr opal-CT ^rarr quartz) were studied in subsurface and surface sections of northern Japan.

In opal-A diatomite, siliceous tests are well preserved, no cementation is observable, and pores exist chiefly as inter- and intragranular micropores (2 ^sim 10µ). During the opal-A to opal-CT transformation, siliceous tests are extensively dissolved to form fine aggregates of opal-CT in matrix and cement of opaline porcelanite. An abrupt decrease of as much as 15% in Previous HitporosityNext Hit occurs between opal-A and opal-CT zones in subsurface sections, a decrease which may be due to the destruction of intragranular pores in siliceous tests by dissolution. Ultramicropores (<2 µ) are dominant in opaline porcelanite. During the opal-CT to quartz transformation, fine aggregates of opal-CT in matrix and cement change to aggregates of quartz p rticles of around 1µ in diameter in quartzose porcelanite. In spite of this obvious change in texture, no abrupt decrease in Previous HitporosityNext Hit occurs between the opal-CT and quartz zones in subsurface sections. Pores exist almost exclusively as intergranular micropores among quartz particles and macropores (>10 µ) as molds and chambers of siliceous tests in quartzose porcelanite.

Previous HitPorosityNext Hit of Neogene noncalcareous siliceous rocks in subsurface sections of northern Japan gradually decreases with the increase of burial Previous HitdepthNext Hit, and silica-phase transformations have a relatively small effect on it. This gradual decrease in Previous HitporosityNext Hit, which corresponds well to that of Neogene mudstone and clean, fine-grained sandstone, indicates that little additional silica cementation occurs during burial (Iijima and Tada, 1981). At a Previous HitdepthNext Hit of 4.5 km and a temperature of 130° C, quartzose porcelanite holds Previous HitporosityNext Hit of 10-15%. Burial Previous HitdepthNext Hit of around 10 km might be required to form dense quartzose chert without Previous HitporosityNext Hit by burial diagenesis of siliceous rocks if extrapolating from the burial Previous HitdepthNext Hit-Previous HitporosityNext Hit relation. This Previous HitdepthTop is too large. Some additional mechanisms are required ther than mechanical compaction, silica-phase transformations and clay alteration. Pressure solution-reprecipitation of quartz is the most probable one.


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