4.7 Article

Genetic mechanism of Carboniferous-Permian coal measures siderite nodules in an epicontinental sea basin-An example from the Zibo area in North China

Journal

ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS
Volume 154, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.oregeorev.2022.105254

Keywords

Siderite nodules; Coal measures; Diagenetic stage; Genetic mechanism; Genetic model; Epicontinental sea basin

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This paper studies the formation environment and genetic mechanism of siderite nodules in the Late Paleozoic coal measures in the Zibo area of North China. The siderite nodules were found to have formed in a tidal flat-lagoon environment. The two genetic mechanisms of the siderite nodules are chemical and biochemical. Most of the carbon in the nodules comes from inorganic carbon from marine carbonate rocks, while the iron comes from hydrothermal fluids. Based on these findings, a genetic model of the siderite nodules in the epicontinental sea basin is established.
Siderite is a mineral resource and a climate sensitive mineral. Siderite nodule layers are widely developed in coal measures within the marine-ontinental transitional facies of North China epicontinental sea basin, yet their formation environment and genetic mechanism are poorly understood. In this paper, taking the siderite nodule layers in the coal measures of the Late Paleozoic Taiyuan Formation in Zibo area of North China as an example, the formation environment and genetic mechanism of siderite nodules in the transitional facies of the epicon-tinental sea basin are studied through detailed petrological, sedimentological and geochemical analysis. It is found that the siderite nodules in the research area were formed in a tidal flat-lagoon environment. The siderite nodules are formed in the synsedimentary stage, the original information of chemical composition and char-acteristics of the nodules being largely retained. Most of the carbon in the siderite nodules originates from inorganic carbon from marine carbonate rocks, with the remainder originating from inorganic carbon formed by dissimilatory iron reducing bacteria (DIR) degrading organic matter. Meanwhile, most of the iron in the siderite nodules originates from hydrothermal fluids, and the remainder from terrigenous sediments. The content of iron input from hydrothermal fluids and terrestrial sediment represents a trade-off relationship. The two genetic mechanisms of the siderite nodules are as follows: 1) Chemical genetic mechanism: The siderite nodules are mainly formed by the combination of low-valence iron (Fe2+) and inorganic carbon in seawater through reduction with iron input from hydrothermal fluids as the main source. 2) Biochemical genetic mechanism: Some is formed by the combination of low-valence iron (Fe2+) and inorganic carbon with high-valence iron (Fe3+) as an oxidant to degrade the organic matter and convert organic carbon into inorganic carbon through DIR. On this basis, a genetic model of the Late Paleozoic coal measures siderite nodules in the epicontinental sea basin is established.

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