Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4689160 Sedimentary Geology 2015 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The Holowilena Ironstone is a Neoproterozoic iron formation in South Australia.•The unit is highly ferruginous and represents deep marine deposition.•The iron formation lacks strong evidence of glacial influence on deposition.•The unit is restricted to a synsedimentary half-graben.•Dense oxic fluids pooling in the half-graben may be responsible for deposition.

The Holowilena Ironstone is a Neoproterozoic iron formation in South Australia associated with glacial deposits of the Sturtian glaciation. Through a comprehensive field study coupled with optical and scanning electron microscopy, X-ray fluorescence, and X-ray diffraction, a detailed description of the stratigraphy, sedimentology, mineralogy, and structure of the Holowilena Ironstone was obtained. The Holowilena Ironstone comprises ferruginous shales, siltstones, diamictites, and is largely made up of hematite and jasper, early diagenetic replacement minerals of precursor iron oxyhydroxides, and silica. These chemical precipitates are variably influenced by turbidites and debris flows contributing clastic detritus to the depositional system. Structural and stratigraphic evidence suggests deposition within a synsedimentary half-graben. A model for the Holowilena Ironstone is proposed, in which dense oxic fluids expelled during sea ice formation in the Cryogenian pool in the depression of the half-graben, allowing for long-lived mixing with the ferruginous seawater and the deposition of iron oxides. This combination of glacial dynamics, tectonism, and ocean chemistry may explain the return of iron formations in the Neoproterozoic.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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