In:
Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark, Geological Society of Denmark, Vol. 37 ( 1988-10-14), p. 117-122
Abstract:
In the kaolin deposit near Rønne on the island of Bornholm in the Baltic Sea a number of well-rounded, unweathered, boulder-like relicts of the granodioritic parent rock are found, embedded in kaolin.
Samples have been taken of one relict at 2 cm interval from the fresh material outwards into the kaolin. The distribution pattern of the major elements in these samples has been studied in order to gain an impression of the leaching conditions at the time of formation, in the immediate vicinity of the relict. This distribution shows on a minor scale, what previously has been demonstrated in bulk for the whole deposit that leaching effects have not been uniform for the different elements, leading to a relative enrichment of calcium in the transition zone close to the unweathered parent rock. TEM and SEM observations revealed that halloysite and smectite are the dominant clay minerals of the transition zone, where kaolinite occurs only sporadically. These minerals apparently become unstable when alkalis and alkali earths are progressively leached, while kaolinite emerges as the pincipal clay mineral, and amphibole and plagioclase no longer remain in the residual mineral assemblage.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
2245-7070
DOI:
10.37570/bgsd-1988-37
DOI:
10.37570/bgsd-1988-37-10
Language:
English
Publisher:
Geological Society of Denmark
Publication Date:
1988
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