About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

CSPG Bulletin

Abstract


Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology
Vol. 34 (1986), No. 1. (March), Pages 17-29

Diagenesis of Locally Uraniferous Sandstones of the Deer Lake Group, and Sandstones of the Howley Formation, Carboniferous Deer Lake Subbasin, Western Newfoundland

Q. Gall, R.N. Hiscott

ABSTRACT

The Deer Lake subbasin of the Maritimes Basin developed as a northeast-trending half-graben which was extensively faulted along its eastern side. Within the subbasin, the Deer Lake Group (North Brook, Rocky Brook and Humber Falls formations) and Howley Formation consist entirely of nonmarine sediments. Coarse-grained alluvial fan deposits and fluviatile sediments recovered from holes drilled in the North Brook, Humber Falls and Howley formations, and from uranium-bearing sandstone boulders found in Pleistocene tills above the northern body of the Humber Falls Formation, have similar detrital and diagenetic mineral assemblages and display the same general paragenetic sequence. The diagenetic mineral assemblage consists of (in order of development): oxidized grain coatings, calcite cement as caliche, quartz overgrowths, clay minerals (illite, kaolinite, chlorite, montmorillonite, mixed-layer illite-montmorillonite), widespread carbonate cements (calcite, minor siderite), pyrite and uraninite, and hematite. The paragenetic sequence reflects a slight over-all increase in pH, and a decrease followed by an increase in Eh.

High-volatile bituminous B and C coaly material and diagenetic clay minerals extracted from mineralized and unmineralized samples suggest maximum burial temperatures between about 125° and 135°C. Paleomagnetic data indicate that it may have taken 40 to 80 million years for the paragenetic sequence to develop to the stage of hematization.

DIAGENESE DE GRES LOCALEMENT URANIFERES DU GROUPE DE DEER LAKE, ET GRES DE LA FORMATION HOWLEY, SOUS-BASSIN DE DEER LAKE, (CARBONIFERE) AU TERRE NEUVE OCCIDENTAL

RESUME

Le sous-bassin de Deer Lake fait partie du bassin des Maritimes et se developpa comme un demi-fosse oriente vers le nord-est et dont la cote oriental fut faille en grande mesure. Dans le sous-bassin meme, le groupe de Deer Lake se compose uniquement de sediments continentaux (les formations de North Brook, Rocky Brook, Humber Falls) et de Howley. Des depots de cone de dejection a gros grain et des sediments fluviatiles trouves dans des carottes qui ont penetre les formations de North Brook, Humber Falls et de Howley, et des gros blocs de gres uraniferes trouves dans des moraines glaciaires Pleistocenes au dessous de la masse nord de la formation de Howley Falls, possedent des assemblages mineraux detritiques et diagenetiques semblables et ont la meme sequence paragenetique. L'assemblage de mineraux diagenetiques est constitute (en ordre de developpement) de des grains a enduits oxydes, du ciment calcite comme encroutement calcaire, des accroissements secondaires de quartz, des mineraux argileux (illite, kaolinite, chlorite, montmorillonite, et illite-montmorillonite a couches melees), des ciments de carbonate repandus (calcite, siderite mineure), pyrite, uraninite et hematite. La sequence paragenetique reflete un leger accroissement de pH dans l'ensemble, et un amoindrissement suivi d'un accroissement de Eh.

Du materiel charbonneux bitumineux B et C tres volatil et des mineraux argileux diagenetiques extraits d'echantillons mineralises et non-mineralises suggerent que les temperatures maximum d'enterrement fussent entre 125° et 135°. Les donnees paleomagnetiques indiquent que vraisemblablement, il fallait de 40 a 80 million d'annees pour la suite paragenetique a atteindre le degre d'hematization.

Traduit par Joan Lovell


Pay-Per-View Purchase Options

The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.

Watermarked PDF Document: $14
Open PDF Document: $24