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Clays and Clay Minerals | 2016

MINERALOGY, GEOCHEMISTRY, AND GENESIS OF SEPIOLITE AND PALYGORSKITE IN NEOGENE LACUSTRINE SEDIMENTS, ESKİŞEHİR PROVINCE, WEST CENTRAL ANATOLIA, TURKEY

Selahattin Kadir; Hülya Erkoyun; Muhsin Eren; Jennifer Huggett; Nergis Önalgil

Sepiolite and palygorskite are common as layers and nodules in the Neogene lacustrine sediments of the Eskişehir area. This study aims to determine their mineralogical and geochemical characteristics, plus the distribution of these economically important sepiolite and palygorskite deposits within the lacustrine environment. Using these data the research goes on to discuss the environmental conditions for their formation. Sepiolite and palygorskite layers are associated with dolomite, marlstone, and argillaceous limestone. The sepiolite nodules (meerschaum), which are former magnesite gravels, are observed in the Upper Miocene reddish-brown fluvial deposits derived from the ophiolite and its fractureinfills at the northern margin of the basin. Sepiolite and palygorskite are only sparsely associated with dolomite and accessory magnesite, quartz, feldspar, and amphibole. Sepiolite and palygorskite fibers formed as oriented platy fan, interwoven, and knitted aggregates in the absence of dolomite indicated precipitation from supersaturated solution. Sepiolite and palygorskite fibers edging dolomite crystals postdate dolomite and formed through precipitation in a vadose environment under semi-arid to arid climatic conditions. High values of Mg+Fe+Ni and enrichment of light rare earth elements (LREE) relative to middle rare earth elements (MREE) and heavy rare earth elements (HREE), Sr content, depletion of Rb+Ba and K, and negligible negative Eu anomalies all reflect the derivation from the Paleozoic metamorphic and Upper Cretaceous ophiolitic rocks. Locally, Upper Miocene to Lower Pliocene volcanic, volcanoclastic, and fluvio-lacustrine sedimentary rocks supplied the required Si, Mg, Al, and Fe for precipitation of Al-sepiolite and Mg-palygorskite with average structural formulae of Si11.91Al0.09O30Mg6.60Al0.78Fe0.13 (OH)4Na0.12K0.06(OH2)4·nH2O and Si7.74Al0.26O20Mg2.52Al1.13Fe0.38(OH)2(OH2)4Na0.32K0.14 Ca0.12·nH2O, respectively. In contrast to the layered sepiolites, the absence of Al and high Ni content in sepiolite nodules suggest formation through replacement of magnesite gravels at shallow burial in an alkal ine environment. The calculated meerschaum sepiol ite chemical formula i s: Si12.02O30Mg7.87Fe0.01(OH)4Na0.13K0.03(OH2)4·nH2O.


Clays and Clay Minerals | 2017

An Approach to Genesis of Sepiolite and Palygorskite In Lacustrine Sediments of the Lower Pliocene Sakarya and Porsuk Formations in the Si˙vrii˙hii˙sar and Yunusemre-bii˙çer Regions (Eskişehii˙r), Turkey

Selahattin Kadir; Muhsin Eren; Taner İrkeç; Hülya Erkoyun; Tacit Külah; Nergis Önalgil; Jennifer Huggett

The Lower Pliocene lacustrine sediments of the Sakarya and Porsuk Formations in the Sivrihisar and Yunusemre-Biçer regions consist of claystone, argillaceous carbonate, carbonate, and evaporites. No detailed studies of paleoclimatic conditions have been performed previously. The present study aimed to determine the depositional environment and paleoclimatic conditions for the formation of these economically important sepiolite/palygorskite/carbonate/evaporite deposits based on detailed mineralogical, geochemical, and isotopic studies. Samples from various lacustrine sediments were examined using polarized-light microscopy, X-ray diffraction, canning electron microscopy, and chemical and isotopic analysis methods. Dolomites are predominantly of micrite, which is partly recrystallized to dolomicrosparite/dolosparite close to desiccation fractures. The presence of ostracods and dacycladecean algae in the carbonates reflects a restricted depositional environment. The formation of sepiolite and palygorskite fibers, either as cement between/enclosing dolomite and/or as calcite crystals, reflects occasional changes in physicochemical conditions provided by fluctuations in the lake-water level and influx of groundwater in relation to climatic changes during and after dolomite precipitation. The positive correlations of ΣREE with Al2O3, Nb, high-field-strength elements, and transition elements are due to alteration of feldspar and hornblende in the volcanic units. The high values of Ba and Sr relative to Cr, Co, Ni, and V also indicate that felsic rather than ophiolitic rocks were the parent material. The crossplot of whole-rock SiO2vs. Al2O3+K2O+Na2O and V/Cr ratio suggests deposition of carbonate-dolomitic sepiolite-sepiolitic dolomite under arid climate and oxic conditions, whereas the Ni/Co and V/(V+Ni) ratios of the sediments indicate deposition of organic-bearing sepiolite/palygorskite under anoxic-dysoxic conditions. An enrichment in δ13C and δ18O values of dolomite with respect to calcite is probably due to differences in mineral fractionations. The δ34S and δ18O values and 87Sr/86Sr isotope ratios for gypsum suggest an intensely evaporitic lacustrine environment fed by an older marine evaporitic source. The Si, Al, Mg, Ca, and enhanced TOT/C required for periodic precipitation of organic-rich brown sepiolite/palygorskite characterize deposition in a swampy environment, while dolomitic sepiolite and sepiolitic dolomite formed in ponds by partial drying of the main alkaline lake.


Clays and Clay Minerals | 2017

MINERALOGY, GEOCHEMISTRY, AND GENESIS OF BENTONITES IN MIOCENE VOLCANIC-SEDIMENTARY UNITS OF THE ANKARA-ÇANKIRI BASIN, CENTRAL ANATOLIA, TURKEY

Selahattin Kadir; Tacit Külah; Nergis Önalgil; Hülya Erkoyun; W. Crawford Elliott

Widespread alteration in the Miocene lacustrine volcanic/sedimentary rocks of the Ankara-Çankiri basin of central Anatolia has resulted in the formation of sizeable (economic) quantities of bentonite deposits. No detailed characterization of the geological, mineralogical, and geochemical properties or the depositional environments of these primary and secondary bentonite deposits has been carried out to date. The present study was undertaken to close this knowledge gap. Two possible hypothetical processes were examined to explain the genesis of the bentonites: 1) The bentonites were formed by the devitrification of volcanic glass in a lacustrine setting; and 2) The bentonites were formed by the chemical weathering of previously deposited volcaniclastic sediments and ophiolitic materials. The characteristics of the bentonites were examined using X-ray diffractometry, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, energy dispersive spectroscopy, and chemical analyses of major and trace elements. The Ankara-Çankırı bentonites are found gradationally interbedded with parent Miocene volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks. These bentonites were deposited in a shallow lacustrine setting based on observed desiccation cracks, locally enclosed coal seams, plant rootlets, gypsum lenses, yellow sulfate-like fracture infillings, and ferric iron oxide stains. Smectite resulted from the chemical weathering of feldspar and possibly also the weathering of biotite and hornblende. This smectite was precipitated in situ on partially dissolved glass and feldspar. The average major-element composition of the smectite-rich clay fractions yielded the following montmorillonitic smectite structural formula: (Na0.33Ca0.31K0.18) (Al2.35Fe0.80Mg0.78)(Si7.79Al0.21)O20(OH)4.The interlayer cation occupancy in the smectite-rich clay fractions was based on the use of Na+/(Na++Ca2+) ratios and showed a composition between a Ca-smectite and a Na-smectite. The relative increases in several groups of elements according to the LREE/(MREE+HREE) ratio, Al2O3, the sum of Ni+Co+Cr, the sum of Fe2O3+MgO+TiO2, the positive correlation between Rb+Ba and Na2O+K2O, Sr and Rb, Rb/Sr and Zr, Zr/Sm and SiO2, the negative Eu anomaly, and the field and petrographic observations further showed that the Si, Al, Fe, and Mg required to form smectite were mainly supplied from the decomposition of feldspars, amphiboles, and volcanic glass from volcanic materials and were partially supplied from the chemical weathering of ophiolitic basement units. The bentonite deposits examined in this study are mainly primary bentonites derived from volcanics and local secondary bentonites from previously deposited volcaniclastic sediments and ophiolitic materials.


Turkish Journal of Earth Sciences | 2013

Genesis of the hydrothermal Karaçayır kaolinite deposit in Miocene volcanics and Palaeozoic metamorphic rocks of the Uşak-Güre Basin, western Turkey

Selahattin Kadir; Hülya Erkoyun


International Journal of Coal Geology | 2017

Mineralogy, geochemistry and genesis of clays interlayered coal seams succession in the Neogene lacustrine Seyitömer coal deposit, Kütahya, western Turkey

Hülya Erkoyun; Selahattin Kadir; Tacit Külah; Jennifer Huggett


Catena | 2017

Genesis of palygorskite and calcretes in Pliocene Eskişehir Basin, west central Anatolia, Turkey

Selahattin Kadir; Muhsin Eren; Tacit Külah; Hülya Erkoyun; Jennifer Huggett; Nergis Önalgil


Clays and Clay Minerals | 2018

Occurrence of fibrous chrysotile and tremolite in the Çankırı and Ankara regions, central Anatolia, Turkey

Tacit Külah; Selahattin Kadir; Hülya Erkoyun; Jennifer Huggett; Eşref Atabey


Neues Jahrbuch Fur Mineralogie-abhandlungen | 2016

Epithermal alteration of Miocene volcanic units in the Gedikler region and the area surrounding the Kışladağ gold deposit, Uşak (western Anatolia), Turkey

Hülya Erkoyun; Selahattin Kadir


Earth Sciences Research Journal | 2016

Occurrence of Cr-bearing beryl in stream sediment from Eskişehir, NW Turkey

Hülya Erkoyun; Selahattin Kadir


Archive | 2006

ESKÝÞEHÝR- KB SÝVRÝHÝSAR BÖLGESÝ, KAYMAZ YÖRESÝNDEKÝ BERÝL GRUBU MÝNERALLERÝ VE OLUÞUMLARINA BÝR ÖN YAKLAÞIM

Hülya Erkoyun; Rifat Bozkurt

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Selahattin Kadir

Eskişehir Osmangazi University

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Tacit Külah

Eskişehir Osmangazi University

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Nergis Önalgil

Eskişehir Osmangazi University

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Eşref Atabey

General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration

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