Mineralogical and chemical variability of fluvial sediments. 1. Bedload sand (Ganga-Brahmaputra, Bangladesh)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
This study investigates the natural processes that control concentration of detrital minerals and consequently
chemical elements in river sand. The novelty of our approach consists in the systematic integration of detailed
textural, petrographical,mineralogical and chemical data, and in the quantitative description and modeling of
relationships among mineralogical and chemical variables for each sample and each grain-size class in each
sample. Bed sediment in transit in the largest sedimentary system on Earth chiefly consists of fine-grained
lithofeldspathoquartzose sand including rich amphibole-epidote-garnet suites, mixed with minor very-finegrained-
sand to silt subpopulations containing less heavy minerals and representing intermittent suspension.
Mineralogical and particularly chemical differences between Ganga and Brahmaputra bedload are orders of
magnitude less than both intersample variability associated with selective-entrainment effects and
intrasample variability associated with settling-equivalence effects. Any provenance interpretation of
mineralogical, chemical, or detrital-geochronology datasets therefore requires quantitative understanding of
hydraulically controlled compositional variability. Mineralogical and chemical, intrasample and intersample
variability can be deduced with simple equations and numerical solutions. The underlying assumptions on the
chemical composition of detrital minerals, as well as the possible pitfalls, uncertainties and approximations
involved are discussed. Principal results include calibration of rare REE-bearing ultradense minerals, illdetermined
by optical analyses but crucial in both detrital-geochronology and settling-equivalence studies,
and assessment of progressively changing concentration for any detrital component with increasing intensity
of selective-entrainment effects. Contributions by each mineral group to the chemical budget were inferred
with sufficient precision and accuracy. Although complex because of diverse controlling factors including
provenance, weathering and anthropogenic pollution, mineralogical and consequently chemical variability of
fluvial sediments can be quantitatively predicted. This path, difficult because of insufficient information but
far from hopeless, shall eventually lead to more accurate calculation of sediment fluxes and chemical budgets,
as well as to a deeper understanding of sedimentary geochemistry and fluvial sedimentology.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
sedimentary geochemistry; sedimentary petrology; settling equivalence; selective entrainment; placer sands
Elenco autori:
Garzanti, Eduardo; Censi, Paolo
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: