CLAYS AND OTHER MINERALS IN COAL SEAMS OF THE MOURA-BARALABA AREA, BOWEN BASIN, AUSTRALIA

Citation
Cr. Ward et Pj. Christie, CLAYS AND OTHER MINERALS IN COAL SEAMS OF THE MOURA-BARALABA AREA, BOWEN BASIN, AUSTRALIA, International journal of coal geology, 25(3-4), 1994, pp. 287-309
Citations number
50
Categorie Soggetti
Metallurgy & Mining","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary","Energy & Fuels
ISSN journal
01665162
Volume
25
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
287 - 309
Database
ISI
SICI code
0166-5162(1994)25:3-4<287:CAOMIC>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
The clays and other minerals in a succession of Late Permian coals of high-volatile bituminous to semi-anthracite rank have been identified, using low-temperature oxygen plasma ashing and X-ray diffraction, and evaluated to identify the relative roles in mineral matter formation of detrital input, early diagenesis in the peat swamp and late diagene sis associated with rank advance. Although well-ordered kaolinite of p robable early diagenetic origin is abundant throughout the succession, the uppermost and lowermost seams of the sequence, regardless of rank , contain relatively abundant illite and/or interstratified illite/sme ctite, along with a small but significant proportion of chlorite. Thes e clays are thought to be essentially of detrital origin, washed or bl own into the peat deposit in relative abundance during the establishme nt and subsequent overwhelming of an extensive and long-lived swampy e nvironment. Quartz is also abundant in the lower seams of the sequence , especially close to the regional sediment source area. Illite is unu sually abundant in the topmost seam in both high- and low-rank parts o f the succession, and thus appears to represent detrital input from a particular source material. Although significant changes are reported in the clays of the associated strata due to rank advance, the princip al effect of rank advance on the minerals in the coal itself appears t o be the development of an ammonium illite, and possibly some addition al fine-grained chlorite, in the semi-anthracite material. Isolation w ithin the organic matter of the coal is thought to have inhibited acce ss for ions such as K+, which might otherwise have become involved in metamorphic reactions and given rise to mineralogical changes commonly found in non-coal sedimentary successions.