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Dune associated calcretes, Rhizoliths and Paleosols from the western continental shelf of India

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Dune associated calcretes, Rhizoliths and Paleosols from the western continental shelf of India
 
Creator Rao, V.P.
Thamban, M.
 
Subject carbonate sediments
dunes
continental shelves
geochemistry
sediment composition
sediment texture
palaeo studies
 
Description The calcareous deposits on the western continental shelf of India, off Bhatkal (water depths 50 to 58 m) occur as crusts, sheets, cylinders and reddish brown mudstones. The outer layers of the crusts are micrite-dominated and beneath this layer detrital/carbonate sands with thin heavy mineral laminations are found. Textural studies indicate that the detrital sands are derived from dunes. Drusy calcite and neomorphic calcite cements are associated with the sands. Sheet deposits contain coarse calcareous component-dominated layer within micrite layers and abundant micrite cements. These are similar to dune associated calcretes. Cylinders are rhizoliths and show different stages of root calcification. Circular bodies, about 0.15 mm to 0.70 mm diameter, interpreted as vascular cylinders of the root tissues are typical. Radial fibrous calcite and spar calcite with inclusions indicate neomorphic cements. Reddish brown mudstones contain calcified root-hair sheaths, micrite glaebules and reworked pollen suggesting that these are indurated soils. X-ray diffraction studies indicate the presence of ferroan calcite, quartz, pyrite and dolomite in rhizoliths and ferroan calcite, goethite and quartz in mudstones. Mudstones and some rhizoliths are Fe-rich and some other rhizoliths are Fe-poor but enriched with Mg and Mn. The particulate matter in the calcareous deposits were initially at the proximity of the coast and cemented by metastable calcites during the ultimate Pleistocene interglacial sea-level stands on the shelf. Pedogenic cementation processes overprinted and developed them into eolianites and paleosols during the subsequent Late Pleistocene sea-level regression. The compositional differences of these deposits were apparently controlled by type of sediments and associated sedimentary environments.
 
Date 2009-01-12T09:16:17Z
2009-01-12T09:16:17Z
1997
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Journal of the Geological Society of India, Vol.49; 297-306p.
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/2043
 
Language en
 
Rights Copyright [1997]. All efforts have been made to respect the copyright to the best of our knowledge. Inadvertent omissions, if brought to our notice, stand for correction and withdrawal of document from this repository.
 
Publisher Geological Society of India