Diagenesis of diatomite from the Kolubara Coal Basin, Baroševac, Serbia

Geological Journal
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

Diatomite associated with the Kolubara Coal Basin was studied to better understand early stage silica diagenesis of shallow water deposits. The Kolubara Basin consists of Neogene siliciclastic rocks, diatomite, marlstone and rare carbonates. Palaeozoic metamorphic and Mesozoic sedimentary and igneous basement rocks are transgressively overlain by Upper Miocene sandstone, siltstone, shale and mudstone. This Upper Miocene section is transgressively overlain by the Pontian section, which contains diatomite and coal beds.

White and grey diatomite forms beds 0.7-2.2 m thick that are continuous over an area of about 2 km2. Siliceous rocks vary in composition from diatomite (81-89 per cent SiO2) to diatom-bearing shale (58-60 per cent SiO2). Siliceous deposits are laminated in places, with the laminae defined by variations in clay minerals, organic matter and diatoms. Diatomite shows only incipient diagenesis characterized by the fragmentation of diatom frustules, the minor to moderate corrosion of frustules and the formation of minor amounts of opal-A' (X-ray amorphous inorganic opal) cement. The low degree of diagenesis results from the young age of the deposits, low burial temperatures and possibly also from the presence of abundant organic matter and the dissolution of kaolinite. The presence of only weak diagenesis is also reflected by the characteristically poor consolidation of the rocks and low rank of the associated coal.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Diagenesis of diatomite from the Kolubara Coal Basin, Baroševac, Serbia
Series title Geological Journal
DOI 10.1002/gj.3350290303
Volume 29
Issue 3
Year Published 1994
Language English
Publisher Wiley
Description 9 p.
First page 209
Last page 217
Country Serbia
City Baroševac
Other Geospatial Kolubara Coal Basin
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details