Title: Smectite Diagenesis in Bentonites of Shale Wall Member of Seabee Formation, North Slope, Alaska: ABSTRACT
Abstract: The Upper Cretaceous Colville Group is present over much of the north-central North Slope and includes the Seabee Formation, a part of a progradational clastic wedge derived from the ancestral Brooks Range. The lower member of the Seabee Formation, the Shale Wall Member, contains thin to moderately thick bentonite beds. Biotite separated from bentonite from the Shale Wall Member in the northwestern subcrop area yielded K/Ar ages of about 92 Ma, dating the origin of these pyroclastic deposits as early Turonian. In the northern part of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska (NPRA) and in the vicinity of Prudhoe Bay field, the less than 2-millimicron fraction of Shale Wall bentonites consists predominantly of smectite with trace to minor amounts of kaolinite. Eastward alon the Barrow arch, the depth of burial of the Shale Wall Member increases from less than 300 m in the NPRA to at least 3,855 m in the vicinity of Mikkelsen Bay as a result of downwarping of the Barrow arch and thick Tertiary deposition. At a depth of burial of about 3,600 m, the smectite-rich bentonites are replaced by rectorite, an ordered mixed-layer illite/smectite (I/S). With increasing depth of burial, the percentage of expandable layers in the ordered I/S decreases from about 45% to 20%. K/Ar dating of the ordered I/S phase places the time of formation in the mid-Miocene, in close agreement with predicted timing of clay diagenesis based on burial history/thermal gradient considerations. End_of_Article - Last_Page 665------------
Publication Year: 1985
Publication Date: 1985-01-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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