“…The authigenic phases of concretions that cement the background sediment are composed of carbonate, phosphate, silica, sulfide, sulfate, and iron oxide minerals (Coleman et al, 1985;Mozley, 1996;Yli-Hemminki et al, 2014). Most common parageneses are carbonate concretions in clayey or sandy horizons, quartz or chert in limestones, and pyrite in black shales (Coleman et al, 1985;Sellés-Martínez, 1996), and the most common concretion-forming minerals are carbonates such as calcite, Mg-calcite, Fe-calcite, siderite, and dolomite (Siegel et al, 1987;Pye et al, 1990;Mozley, 1996). Concretion size varies from millimeters to meters, and estimated growth rates vary from tens to hundreds up to thousands of years for decimeter-sized concretions (Duck, 1995;Pratt, 2001;Thomka and Lewis, 2013).…”