Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T04:23:33.307Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mineral Assemblages of Volcanic and Detrital Partings in Tertiary Coal Beds, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Linda M. Reinink-Smith*
Affiliation:
Mineral Industry Research Laboratory, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Volcanic and non-volcanic partings are exposed in coal beds of the Tertiary Beluga and Sterling Formations along the shores of the Kenai lowland, Alaska. About two-thirds of the partings originated as air-fall tephra which fell in coal-forming swamps. The tephra partings in the Pliocene strata are unaltered or slightly altered and have a characteristic mineral assemblage of volcanic glass ± montmoriUonite ± kaolinite ± opal-CT. Miocene strata are slightly altered to totally altered, and a typical mineral assemblage consists of feldspar ± kaolinite ± montmorillonite ± quartz ± crandallite ± altered volcanic glass. Crandallite appears to have formed early in diagenesis by the replacement of volcanic glass prior to the formation of montmorillonite and kaolinite.

About one-third of the partings originated primarily as detrital sediments derived from surrounding metamorphic and sedimentary terranes and were deposited by periodic floods. Mixtures of tephra and detrital sediments were also noted and were difficult to distinguish from tephra partings in the field. Detrital partings are characterized by detrital chlorite + illite + smectite + quartz ± feldspar ± siderite ± kaolinite. The chlorite in these strata is allogenic. Smectite is less common in the detrital partings.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1990, The Clay Minerals Society

References

Adkison, W. L., Kelley, J. S. and Newman, K. R. (1975) Lithology and palynology of the Beluga and Sterling Formations exposed near Homer, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska: U.S. Geol. Surv. Open-File Rept. 75–383, 239 pp.Google Scholar
Barnes, F. F. and Cobb, E. H., 1959 Geology and coal resources of the Homer district, Kenai coal field, Alaska U.S. Geol. Surv. Bull. 1058–F 217260.Google Scholar
Blatt, H., Middleton, G. and Murray, R., 1972 Origin of Sedimentary Rocks 2nd ed. New Jersey Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs.Google Scholar
Brindley, G. W., Brindley, G. W. and Brown, G., 1980 Order-disorder in clay mineral structures Crystal Structures of Clay Minerals and their X-ray Identification London Mineralogical Society 125195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brownfield, M. E., Affolter, R. H., Strieker, G. D. and Rao, P. D., 1987 Crandallite group minerals in the Capps and Q coal bed, Tyonek Formation, Beluga Energy Resource Area, southcentral Alaska Focus on Alaska’s Coal’ 86 Alaska Fairbanks 142149.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. A. and Magoon, L.B., 1978 Geologic framework of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. Bull. 64 373402.Google Scholar
Fleischer, M., Wilcox, R. E. and Matzko, J. J. (1984) Microscopic determination of the nonopaque minerals: U.S. Geol. Surv. Bull. 1627, 453 pp.Google Scholar
Greene-Kelly, R., 1955 Dehydration of the montmorillonite minerals Mineral. Mag. 30 604615.Google Scholar
Grim, R. E. and Giiven, N., 1978 Bentonites Amsterdam Elsevier.Google Scholar
Hayes, J. B., Harms, J. O., Wilson, T. W. and Miller, T. P., 1976 Contrasts between braided and meandering stream deposits, Beluga and Sterling Formations (Tertiary), Cook Inlet, Alaska Recent and Ancient Environments in Alaska J1J27.Google Scholar
Jackson, M. L., 1974 Soil Chemical Analysis—Advanced Course 2nd ed. Wisconsin Madison.Google Scholar
Keller, W. D., 1956 Clay minerals as influenced by environments of their formation Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. Bull. 40 26892710.Google Scholar
Khoury, H. N. and Eberl, D. D., 1979 Bubble-wall shards altered to montmorillonite Clays & Clay Minerals 27 291292.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinter, E. B. and Diamond, S., 1956 A new method for preparation and treatment of oriented aggregate specimens of soil clays for X-ray diffraction analysis Soil Science 81 111120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirschner, C. E. and Lyon, C. A., 1973 Statigraphic and tectonic development of Cook Inlet petroleum province Arctic Geology 19 396407.Google Scholar
Merritt, R. D., Lueck, L. L., Rawlinson, S. E., Belowich, M. A., Goff, K. M., Clough, J. G. and Reinink-Smith, L. M. (1987) Southern Kenai Peninsuala (Homer district) coal-resource assessment and mapping project: Alaska Div. Geol. Geophys. Surv., Public-data File 87–15, 125 pp.Google Scholar
Odum, J. K., Gardner, C. A., Yehle, L. A., Schmoll, H. R. and Dearborn, L. L. (1983) Preliminary lithologic, geotechnical, and geophysical data from drill hole CW-81-2, Chuitna West coal field, Cook Inlet region, Alaska: U.S. Geol. Surv. Open-File Rept. 83–78, 12 pp.Google Scholar
Rao, P.D. and Smith, J.E., 1987 Characterization of Chuitna Coal from deep drill core with possible applications to seam correlation Focus on Alaska’s Coal’ 86 72 157182.Google Scholar
Rawlinson, S. E., 1979 Paleoenvironments of deposition, paleocurrent directions, and the provenance of Tertiary deposits along Kachemak Bay, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska Alaska University of Alaska, Fairbanks.Google Scholar
Richardson, G. and Francis, E. H., 1971 Fragmental clay (FCR) in coal-bearing sequences in Scotland and north-west England Proc. Yorks. Geol. Soc. 38 229260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Senkayi, A. L., Dixon, J. B., Hossner, L. R., Abder-Ruhman, M. and Fanning, D. S., 1984 Mineralogy and genetic relationships of tonsteins, bentonite, and lignitic strata in the Eocene Yegua Formation of east-central Texas Clays & Clay Minerals 32 259271.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Senkayi, A. L., Ming, D. W., Dixon, J. B. and Hossner, L. R., 1987 Kaolinite, opal-CT, and clinoptilolite in altered tuffs interbedded with lignite in the Jackson Group, Texas Clays & Clay Minerals 35 281290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spears, D. A., 1970 A kaolinite mudstone (tonstein) in the British coal measures J. Sediment. Pet. 35 610618.Google Scholar
Stach, E., Mackowsky, M-Th Teichmüller, M., Taylor, G. H., Chandra, D. and Teichmüller, R., 1982 Stach’s Textbook of Coal Petrology Berlin Gebrüder Bomtraeger.Google Scholar
Swineford, A., Frye, J. C. and Leonard, A. B., 1955 Petrography of the late Tertiary ash falls in the central Great Plains J. Sediment. Pet. 25 243261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Triplehom, D. M., 1976 Volcanic ash partings in coals: Characteristics and stratigraphic significance The Neogene Symposium 1976 912.Google Scholar
Triplehom, D. M. and Bohor, B. F. (1981) Altered volcanic ash partings in the C coal bed, Ferron Sandstone Member of the Mancos Shale, Emery County, Utah: U.S. Geol. Surv. Open-File Rept. 81–775, 43 pp.Google Scholar
Triplehom, D. M. and Bohor, B. F., 1983 Goyazite in kaolinitic altered tuff beds of Cretaceous age near Denver, Colorado Clays & day Minerals 31 299304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Triplehom, D. M., Turner, D. L. and Naeser, C. W., 1977 K-Ar and fission-track dating of ash partings in Tertiary coals from the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska: A radiometric age for the Homerian-Clamgulchian stage boundary Geol. Soc. Amer. Bull. 88 11561160.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Marel, H. W. and Beutelspacher, H., 1976 Atlas of Infrared Spectroscopy of Clay Minerals and their Admixtures Amsterdam Elsevier.Google Scholar
Welton, J. E., 1984 SEM Petrology Atlas Oklahoma Tulsa.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wise, S. W. Jr. and Ausbum, M. P., 1980 Kinney bentonite: Re-examined Scanning Electron Microscopy Illinois AMF O’Hare 565572.Google Scholar
Wise, S. W. Jr. and Weaver, F. M., 1979 Volcanic ash: Examples of devitrification and early diagenesis Scanning Electron Microscopy Illinois SEM Inc., AMF O’Hare 511518.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. A., Hopkins, D. M. and Leopold, E. B., 1966 Tertiary stratigraphy and paleobotany of the Cook Inlet region, Alaska U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 398–A A1A29.Google Scholar