Clay minerals in the mud and soil that coat the Earth's surface are part of a clay cycle that breaks down and creates rock in the crust. Clays generated by surface weathering and shallow diagenetic processes are transformed into mature clay mineral assemblages in the mudrocks found in sedimentary basins. During metamorphism, the release of alkali elements and boron from clay minerals generates magmas that are subsequently weathered and recycled, representing the magma-to-mud pathway of the clay cycle. Volcanogenic clay represents an important but hitherto underestimated proportion of recycled clay. Within sedimentary basins, immature clays are transformed to mature and supermature clay assemblages by a series of reactions that generally obey the Ostwald Step Rule. Bedding-parallel microfabric generated by these reactions produce significant changes in the physical properties of deeply buried mudrocks. Clay minerals react to form equilibrium assemblages in 1 × 10 4 years in some hydrothermal systems, but immature clays may survive for up to 2 × 10 9 years in midcontinental rift basins. Clay mineral assemblages and the b cell dimension of K-white mica can be used to infer the geotectonic settings of sedimentary basins.
High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) measurements of the thickness of white mica crystallites were made on three pelite samples that represented a prograde transition from diagenetic mudstone though anchizonal slate to epizonal slate. Crystallite thickness, measured normal to (001), increases as grade increases, whereas the XRD measured 10 ~ peakprofile, the Kubler index, decreases. The mode of the TEM-measured size population can be correlated with the effective crystallite size N(ool ) determined by XRD.The results indicate that the Kubler index of white mica crystallinity measures changes in the crystallite size population that result from prograde increases in the size of coherent X-ray scattering domains. These changes conform to the Scherrer relationship between XRD peak broadening and small crystallite size. Lattice 'strain' broadening is relatively unimportant, and is confined to white mica populations in the diagenetic mudstone. Rapid increases in crystallite size occur in the anchizone, coincident with cleavage development. Changes in the distribution of crystallite thickness with advancing grade and cleavage development are characteristic of graingrowth by Ostwald ripening. The Kubler index rapidly loses sensitivity as an indicator of metapelitic grade within the epizone.
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