Mineralogy and geochemistry of siliciclastic Miocene Cuddalore Formation, Cauvery Basin,South India:Implications for provenance and paleoclimate

被引:1
|
作者
Nurul Absar [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Earth Sciences, Pondicherry University
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P532 [古气候学]; P534.621 [];
学科分类号
070903 ;
摘要
The Cuddalore Formation of the Cauvery Basin received siliciclastic detritus from inland areas of the Southern Granulite Terrain(SGT). It represented continental-fluvial sedimentation in the eastern continental margin of South India during the Miocene. Indian Summer Monsoon was thought to be initiated in the early Miocene and intensified during the middle Miocene causing major climatic shifts in the Indian subcontinent. In the present work, detailed mineralogical and geochemical studies on the siliciclastic Cuddalore Formation have been carried out to understand the provenance and paleoclimatic conditions during the Miocene. The paleocurrent direction, textural immaturity and framework detrital modes of sandstones suggest rapid uplift of basement and sediment source from nearby Madras Block of SGT. Various diagnostic immobile trace element ratios such as Th/Sc, Co/Th, La/Sc, La/Co suggest a tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite-charnockite provenance, and somewhat more felsic composition of source area compared to the present upper continental crust(UCC). Rare earth element mixed model suggests that sediments were dominantly(80%) sourced from felsic charnockite, with a minor contribution(20%) from mafic granulites. Higher abundance of advanced-weathering products like kaolinite, very high(>98) chemical index of alteration(CIA)values, severe depletion of mobile elements(Ca, Na, K, Mg, Ba, Rb) in comparison to UCC, significantly higher a Mg, a Ca, a Na, a K, a Sr and a Ba values(higher than the unity), all suggest the extreme chemical weathering in source terrain and/or in the sedimentary basin. Calculations based on CIA show high average surface temperature between 29.3℃ and 29.5℃ and high mean annual precipitation ranging from 2339 mm/yr to 2467 mm/yr. The geochemical data are consistent with the paleogeographic position of the depositional basin(Cauvery Basin) and suggest the deposition of Cuddalore sediments(the Cuddalore Formation) in a nearequatorial location under a warm climate condition with abundant monsoonal precipitation.
引用
收藏
页码:602 / 630
页数:29
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mineralogy and geochemistry of siliciclastic Miocene Cuddalore Formation, Cauvery Basin, South India: Implications for provenance and paleoclimate
    Absar, Nurul
    JOURNAL OF PALAEOGEOGRAPHY-ENGLISH, 2021, 10 (04): : 602 - 630
  • [2] Mineralogy and geochemistry of clastic sediments of the Terani Formation, Cauvery Basin, southern India: implications for paleoweathering, provenance and tectonic setting
    Jayagopal Madhavaraju
    Subin Prakash Rajendra
    Yong Il Lee
    Erik Ramirez Montoya
    Sooriamuthu Ramasamy
    Rufino Lozano SantaCruz
    Geosciences Journal, 2020, 24 : 651 - 667
  • [3] Mineralogy and geochemistry of clastic sediments of the Terani Formation, Cauvery Basin, southern India: implications for paleoweathering, provenance and tectonic setting
    Madhavaraju, Jayagopal
    Rajendra, Subin Prakash
    Lee, Yong Il
    Montoya, Erik Ramirez
    Ramasamy, Sooriamuthu
    SantaCruz, Rufino Lozano
    GEOSCIENCES JOURNAL, 2020, 24 (06) : 651 - 667
  • [4] Geochemistry of the siliciclastic sediments in the Barak basin, Indo-Burma Range, India: Insights into provenance, paleoclimate, and depositional history
    Sangeeta, Angom
    Kingson, Oinam
    Yadav, Bhupendra S.
    Pandey, N.
    Meitei, Ngangom Romario
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES-X, 2023, 10
  • [5] Lithofacies and petrography of Miocene Murree Formation, Peshawar basin, NW Pakistan: implications for provenance and paleoclimate
    Yar M.
    Hanif M.
    Sajid M.
    Arabian Journal of Geosciences, 2021, 14 (8)
  • [6] Geochemistry of sandstones from the Upper Cretaceous Sillakkudi Formation, Cauvery Basin, southern India: Implication for provenance
    D. Bakkiaraj
    R. Nagendra
    R. Nagarajan
    John S. Armstrong-Altrin
    Journal of the Geological Society of India, 2010, 76 : 453 - 467
  • [7] Geochemistry of Sandstones from the Upper Cretaceous Sillakkudi Formation, Cauvery Basin, Southern India: Implication for Provenance
    Bakkiaraj, D.
    Nagendra, R.
    Nagarajan, R.
    Armstrong-Altrin, John S.
    JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF INDIA, 2010, 76 (05) : 453 - 467
  • [8] Geochemistry of the Dalmiapuram Formation of the Uttatur Group (Early Cretaceous), Cauvery basin, southeastern India: Implications on provenance and paleo-redox conditions
    Madhavaraju, Jayagopal
    Lee, Yong Il
    REVISTA MEXICANA DE CIENCIAS GEOLOGICAS, 2009, 26 (02): : 380 - 394
  • [9] Provenance of the Cenozoic siliciclastic intramontane Amaga Formation: Implications for the early Miocene collision between Central and South America
    Lara, Mario
    Salazar-Franco, Ana M.
    Silva-Tamayo, Juan C.
    SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY, 2018, 373 : 147 - 162
  • [10] Geochemistry of the sedimentary rocks from the Nanxiong Basin, South China and implications for provenance, paleoenvironment and paleoclimate at the K/T boundary
    Yan, Yi
    Xia, Bin
    Lin, Ge
    Cui, Xuejun
    Hu, Xiaoqiong
    Yan, Pin
    Zhang, Faqiang
    SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY, 2007, 197 (1-2) : 127 - 140