PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Main Colouring Minerals in the ‘Poznań Clays’: Case Studies from the Upper Neogene in the Polish Lowlands

Treść / Zawartość
Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
PL
Główne minerały barwiące w iłach poznańskich: Studia przypadków z górnego neogenu na Niżu Polskim
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
This article is devoted exclusively to three iron minerals that have a decisive influence on the colour of the ‘Poznań Clays’. These are hematite, goethite, and jarosite. Their presence gives the ‘Poznań Clays’, which are the most common and best known Neogene lithostratigraphic unit in the Polish Lowlands, characteristic ‘warm’ colours ranging from yellow through orange to dark red. The presented results were mainly obtained using powder X-ray diffraction and 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy.
Rocznik
Strony
145--152
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 40 poz., rys., zdj.
Twórcy
autor
  • Institute of Geology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Krygowskiego 12, 61-680 Poznań, Poland
  • Faculty of Geology, Geophysics and Environmental Protection, AGH University of Science and Technology, al. Mickiewicza 30, 30-059 Kraków, Poland
  • ) Institute of Geological Sciences, Polish Academy of Sciences, Twarda 51/55, 00-818 Warszawa, Poland
  • Institute of Geology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Krygowskiego 12, 61-680 Poznań, Poland
autor
  • ) Institute of Geology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Krygowskiego 12, 61-680 Poznań, Poland
Bibliografia
  • 1. V. Valanciene, R. Siauciunas and J. Baltusnikaite, “The influence of mineralogical composition on the colour of clay body”, J. Eur. Ceram. Soc. 30, 1609–1617 (2010).
  • 2. F. Habashi, “Pigments through the Ages” Int. Ceram. Rev. 65, 156–165 (2016).
  • 3. J. Klęsk, A. Błachowski, R. Diduszko, Ł. Kruszewski and M. Widera, “Iron-bearing phases affecting the colour of upper Neogene clayey sediments from Dymaczewo Stare, west-central Poland”, Geologos 28, 129–139 (2022).
  • 4. G. J. Retallack and A.P. Broz, “Ediacaran and Cambrian paleosols from central Australia”, Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 560, no. 110047 (2020).
  • 5. D. A. Ruban, A. V. Mikhailenko and N. N. Yashalova, “The power of colour in geoheritage studies and marketing: some tentative reflections”, Geologos 27, 57–65 (2021).
  • 6. E. F. McBride, “Significance of color in red, green, purple, olive, brown, and gray beds of Difunta Group, northeastern Mexico”, J. Sediment. Petrol., 44, 760–773 (1974).
  • 7. J. Torrent, U. Schwertmann and D.G. Schulze, “Iron oxide mineralogy of some soils of two river terrace sequences in Spain”, Geoderma 23, 191–208 (1980).
  • 8. P. M. Myrow, “A new graph for understanding colors of mudrocks and shales”, J. Geol. Educ. 38, 16–20 (1990).
  • 9. R.M. Cornell and U. Schwertmann, The Iron Oxides – Structure, Properties, Reactions, Occurrences and Uses, 2nd ed. (Wiley-VCH Verlag, Weinheim, 2003), 703 pp.
  • 10. M. E. Tucker, Sedimentary Rocks in the Field: A Practical Guide (Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, UK., 2011), 304 pp.
  • 11. S. Dyjor, A. Bogda and T. Chodak, “Preliminary studies on the mineral composition of the Poznań Clays”, Rocz. Pol. Tow. Geol. 38, 491–510 (1968).
  • 12. A. Wiewióra and R. Wyrwicki, “Beidellite from the sediments of the Poznań series”, Kwart. Geol. 20, 331–341 (1976).
  • 13. R. Wyrwicki and A. Wiewióra, “Clay minerals of the Upper Miocene sediments in Poland”, Bull. Pol. Acad. Sci., Earth Sci., 29, 67–71 (1981).
  • 14. M. Wagner, “Lithological-petrographical variability and depositional setting of the youngest Tertiary sediments in the Middle-Odra Trough”, Geol. Sudet. 17, 57–101 (1982).
  • 15. K. Górniak, T. Szydłak, W.S. Sikora, A. Gaweł, K. Bahranowski and T. Ratajczak, „Minerały ilaste w różnobarwnych odmianach skał występujących nad pokładem węgla brunatnego w rejonie Konina”, Górn. Odkryw. 43, 129–139 (2001).
  • 16. M. Widera, Litostratygrafia i paleotektonika kenozoiku podplejstoceńskiego Wielkopolski (Wyd. Nauk. UAM, Poznań, 2007), 224 pp.
  • 17. A. Duczmal-Czernikiewicz, Geochemistry and mineralogy of the Poznań Formation (Polish Lowlands) (Wyd. Nauk. UAM, Poznań, 2010), 88 pp.
  • 18. A. Duczmal-Czernikiewicz, “Evidence of soils and palaeosols in the Poznań Formation (Neogene, Polish Lowlands)”, Geol. Q., 57, 189–204 (2013).
  • 19. M. Widera, “Sand- and mud-filled fluvial palaeochannels in the Wielkopolska Member of the Neogene Poznań Formation, central Poland”, Ann. Soc. Geol. Pol. 83, 19–28 (2013).
  • 20. M. Widera, E. Kowalska and M. Fortuna, “A Miocene anastomosing river system in the area of Konin Lignite Mine, central Poland”, Ann. Soc. Geol. Pol. 87, 157–168 (2017).
  • 21. P. Maciaszek, L. Chomiak, R. Wachocki and M. Widera, “The interpretive significance of ripple-derived sedimentary structures within the late Neogene fluvial succession, central Poland”, Geologos 25, 1–13 (2019).
  • 22. M. Widera, L. Chomiak and T. Zieliński, “Sedimentary facies, processes and paleochannel pattern of an anastomosing river system: an example from the Upper Neogene of Central Poland”, J. Sediment. Res. 89, 487–507 (2019).
  • 23. P. Maciaszek, L. Chomiak, P. Urbański and M. Widera, “New insights into the genesis of the ‘Poznań Clays’ – upper Neogene of Poland”, Civ. Environ. Eng. Rep. 30, 18–32 (2020).
  • 24. T. Zieliński and M. Widera, “Anastomosing-to-meandering transitional river in sedimentary record: A case study from the Neogene of central Poland”, Sediment. Geol. 404, no. 105677 (2020).
  • 25. A. Kędzior, M. Widera and T. Zieliński, “Ancient and modern anastomosing rivers: insights from sedimentological and geomorphological case studies of the Triassic, Neogene and Holocene of Poland”, Geol. Q. 65, no. 54 (2021).
  • 26. E. Ciuk, “Schematy litostratygraficzne trzeciorzędu Niżu Polskiego”, Kwart. Geol. 14, 754–771 (1970).
  • 27. M. Piwocki and M. Ziembińska-Tworzydło, “Neogene of the Polish Lowlands – lithostratigraphy and pollenspore zones”, Geol. Q. 41, 21–40 (1997).
  • 28. M. Piwocki, J. Badura and B. Przybylski, “Neogen” in Budowa geologiczna Polski, t. 1, Stratygrafia część 3a, Kenozoik – paleogen, neogen, edited by T. M. Peryt and M. Piwocki (Państw. Inst. Geol., Warszawa, 2004), pp. 71–133.
  • 29. M. Widera, Geologia polskich złóż węgla brunatnego (Wyd. Nauk. Bogucki, Poznań, 2021), 180 pp.
  • 30. M. Widera, A. Bechtel, L. Chomiak, P. Maciaszek, B. Słodkowska, R. Wachocki, E. Worobiec, G. Worobiec and T. Zieliński, “Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of the Konin Basin (central Poland) during lignite accumulation linked to the Mid-Miocene Climate Optimum”, Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol., 568, no. 110307 (2021a).
  • 31. M. Widera, T. Zieliński, L. Chomiak, P. Maciaszek, R. Wachocki, A. Bechtel, B. Słodkowska, E. Worobiec and G. Worobiec, “Tectonic-climatic interactions during changes of depositional environments in the Carpathian foreland: An example from the Neogene of central Poland”, Acta Geol. Pol. 71, 519–542 (2021b).
  • 32. Ł. Kruszewski, “Supergene sulphate minerals from the burning coal mining dumps in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin, South Poland”, Int. J. Coal Geol., 105, 91–109 (2013).
  • 33. S. Mederski, Ł. Kruszewski and J. Pršek, “Epithermal Cu mineralization in the Stary Lesieniec rhyodacite quarry, Lower Silesia: primary and secondary mineral paragenesis”, Geol. Q. 65, no. 43 (2021).
  • 34. R. Górnicki, A Błachowski and K. Ruebenbauer, “Mössbauer Spectrometer MsAa-3”, Nukleonika 52 (suppl. 1), S7–S12 (2007)
  • 35. A. Błachowski, K. Ruebenbauer, J. Żukrowski and R. Górnicki, “Early design stage of the MsAa-4 Mössbauer spectrometer”, Acta Phys. Pol. A 114, 1707–1713 (2008).
  • 36. J.G. Stevens, A.M. Khansanov, J.W. Miller, H. Pollak and Z. Li, Mössbauer Mineral Handbook. Mössbauer Effect Data Center, 3rd edition (The University of North Carolina, Asheville, NC, USA, 2005), 636 pp.
  • 37. M.D. Dyar, D.G. Agresti, M.W. Schaefer, Ch.A. Grant and E.C. Sklute, “Mössbauer Spectroscopy of Earth and Planetary Materials”, Ann. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 34, 83–125 (2006).
  • 38. E. Murad, “Mössbauer spectroscopy of clays, soils and their mineral constituents”, Clay Miner. 45, 413–430 (2010).
  • 39. M.D. PiPujol and P. Buurman, “The distinction between ground-water gley and surface-water gley phenomena in Tertiary paleosols of the Ebro basin, NE Spain”, Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 110, 103–113 (1994).
  • 40. Q. Hao, F. Oldfield, J. Bloemendal, J., Torrent and Z. Guo, “The record of changing hematite and goethite accumulation over the past 22 Myr on the Chinese Loess Plateau from magnetic measurements and diffuse reflectance spectroscopy”, J. Geophys. Res. 114, no. B12101 (2009).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-3700bf93-418a-4582-bffd-9e14cc350063
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.