Hw. Nesbitt et al., EFFECTS OF CHEMICAL-WEATHERING AND SORTING ON THE PETROGENESIS OF SILICICLASTIC SEDIMENTS, WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR PROVENANCE STUDIES, The Journal of geology, 104(5), 1996, pp. 525-542
The bulk chemical compositions, mineralogy, and mineral proportions of
sands and muds of the Mallacoota Basin in southeastern Australia refl
ect the composition of weathering profiles mantling source rocks, rath
er than bedrock. Muds contain abundant clay minerals that are virtuall
y absent from the source rocks but abundant in the weathering profiles
. Sands are strongly enriched in quartz relative to source rocks, even
in the headwaters of the fluvial system, demonstrating that feldspar
destruction occurs by in situ chemical weathering within profiles and
before detritus enters the fluvial system. K-feldspar is proportionall
y more abundant in fluvial sands than in source rocks because plagiocl
ase is more rapidly destroyed than either quartz or K-feldspar in weat
hering profiles. Subsequent erosion and sorting produce sands enriched
in quartz, with high K-feldspar:plagioclase ratios relative to source
rocks. The composition of plagioclase incorporated into the fluvial s
ands is also controlled by chemical weathering. In weathering profiles
the anorthite component of plagioclase weathers more rapidly than the
albite component so that vestigal plagioclase in the profiles, and in
sands derived therefrom, is more albitic than in the source rocks. Tr
aditional point-counting techniques to obtain modal estimates of sedim
ents and sedimentary rocks are not widely applicable because (1) most
sedimentary rocks-shales and equivalent mud-grade materials-are too fi
ne-grained for petrographic examination, and (2) rock fragments are ra
re to non-existant in most ''basement'' source terranes. We use a meth
od that involves identification of mineral species present, informatio
n on their compositions, and bulk chemical compositions to calculate m
odal compositions by an albegraic method (CAM). The technique is equal
ly applicable to source rocks, sediments, and sedimentary rocks of all
size grades, so that meaningful mass balances and provenance studies
can be carried out. Results of this study show that, where substantial
chemical weathering has occurred, Q:F ratios and P:K ratios more clos
ely reflect those of weathering profiles than bedrock from which they
were ultimately derived.