Paper No. 16
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-5:30 PM
STRATIGRAPHIC, MINERALOGIC, AND GEOCHEMICAL EVIDENCE FOR ORDOVICIAN K-BENTONITES IN WESTERN VERMONT
Field and laboratory observations suggest the occurrence of three K-bentonite beds in uppermost Beekmantown (middle Ordovician) carbonates in outcrops on the shores of Lake Champlain in western Vermont. These beds range in thickness from 5 to 45 cm and are distinguished in the field by their very fine-grained, shaly appearance, sharp basal and upper contacts, lateral continuity over hundreds of meters in outcrop, and recessive weathering. Thin section analysis reveals an illitic clay-rich matrix with tear-shaped clasts interpreted as devitrified volcaniclastic spherules, and rare (1%) quartz clasts. Whole-rock geochemistry documents high concentrations of K2O (7.4 8.4 wt %) and low SiO2/Al2O3 ratios (2.2 2.7), both characteristics of K-bentonites. XRD analysis of the clay fraction indicates the presence of R3 interstratified illite/smectite with 95% illite layers as well as accessory chlorite and potassium feldspar, and near-absence of quartz. By comparison, Ordovician shales in the study area contain 4% K2O, SiO2:Al2O3 ratios of 3.2 4.2, abundant chlorite and quartz, and accessory plagioclase with no potassium feldspar. The K-bentonite beds plot mostly in the volcanogenic field on a SiO2/Al2O3 vs TiO2/Al2O3 diagram whereas the Ordovician shales plot in the detrital field. Rare earth elements are enriched in LREE (~100x chondrite) relative to HREE (~10-20x chondrite) with (La/Sm)n ratios of ~ 4.0 and (Gd/Yb)n ratios of ~ 2.5. Relative to average upper continental crust, the possible K-bentonites are enriched in immobile elements Sc, Cr and Ni and depleted in Nb, Ta, P, Zr and Hf.
The age of the proposed K-bentonite beds, as indicated by the age of the enclosing carbonates, is approximately the same as the 485 to 470 Ma Shelburne Falls volcanic arc, a potential source of the volcanogenic material. Preliminary classification using immobile trace elements suggests the K-bentonites were derived from basaltic or basaltic andesite ash; in that case, the source volcano was probably close to the site of deposition of the ash.