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The use of magnetic susceptibility and trace element geochemistry for the correlation of fine-grained siliciclastic sequences: a Late Llandovery example from northwest England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 1999

L. T. P. ENGLISH
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, UK Present address: Yandal Exploration, Great Central Mines Ltd., Jundee Gold Operations, P.O. Box 1652, Subiaco, WA 6904, Australia. E-mail: luce@awi.com.au

Abstract

High-resolution lithological and magnetic susceptibility logs were made of two sections of the Upper Llandovery Browgill Formation in northwest England: Stockdale Beck, the type section of the Browgill Formation, and Spengill. The Browgill Formation is composed of fine-grained deep marine siliciclastics, which can be divided broadly into two facies: a homogeneous grey mudstone, deposited under oxygenated bottom-water conditions, and subordinate beds of laminated, graptolite-bearing black mudstone deposited under low bottom-water oxygen levels. The latter facies is often partially or fully diagenetically altered to chlorite nodules, occasionally with manganese carbonate nucleii. Magnetic susceptibility logs are shown to reflect variations in the illite–chlorite ratio of the clay mineralogy. Chlorite is a paramagnetic mineral, so the bands of chlorite nodules produce magnetic susceptibility highs. Correlation demonstrates that diagenetically altered beds of laminated black mudstone are continuous between the two sections, now situated 32 km apart. This lateral continuity would favour pelagic fallout in preference to gravity flow as a depositional model for both facies. A correlated sequence within the turriculatus Biozone is 3.8 times thicker at Spengill than at Stockdale Beck, probably reflecting variations in sediment accumulation rates. Correlation also identifies significant non-sequences in both sections: at least 47% of the turriculatus Biozone (including maximus Sub-biozone) is missing at Stockdale Beck and at least 77% of the crispus Biozone is missing at Spengill. The identification of non-sequences may be of value for refining graptolite biostratigraphy.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1999 Cambridge University Press

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