Northeastern Section (39th Annual) and Southeastern Section (53rd Annual) Joint Meeting (March 25–27, 2004)

Paper No. 7
Presentation Time: 1:00 PM-5:00 PM

ORIGIN AND SILICA DIAGENESIS OF TEREDOLITES-BORED WOOD IN TRANSGRESSIVE DEPOSITS, EOCENE TALLAHATTA FORMATION, WESTERN ALABAMA


COUNTS, John and SAVRDA, Charles E., Department of Geology and Geography, Auburn Univ, 210 Petrie Hall, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849-5305, countjo@auburn.edu

Silicified angiosperm wood entombed in a porcelanite concretion has been recovered from the basal part of a siliceous claystone sequence in the Eocene Tallahatta Formation, western Alabama. This wood is characterized by Teredolites longissimus, borings produced by wood-digesting teredinid bivalves (shipworms). Like many bored fossil wood occurrences in the Gulf coastal plain, this bored substrate appears to be associated with a phase of sea-level rise and possibly could have originated as an in situ stumpground at or near a transgressive surface. Silicification of the wood and elements of the borings is related to remobilization of silica from originally diatom-rich ambient sediments. Petrographic and x-ray diffraction analyses indicate that silica phases and replacement textures (e.g., amorphous silica, opal-CT lepispheres, and chalcedony) are variable and govern the histological detail preserved in the wood. The disposition of silica phases in the wood, and concretion growth, likely reflect temporal or diffusion-controlled spatial gradients in dissolved silica concentrations of mineralizing fluids. Teredolites tunnels effectively increased the surface area of wood in contact with reactive sediments and/or silica-rich interstitial fluids and, as a consequent, enhanced wood preservation.