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- Title
Rare earth element and yttrium compositions of the Paleoproterozoic Yuanjiacun BIF in the Lüliang area and their implications for the Great Oxidation Event (GOE).
- Authors
Wang, ChangLe; Zhang, LianChang; Lan, CaiYun; Dai, YanPei
- Abstract
In China, most Precambrian banded iron formations (BIFs) are situated in the North China Craton. The Yuanjiacun iron deposit, located in the Lüliang area, is arguably the most representative Superior-type BIF. This iron deposit is coherent with the sedimentary rock succession of the Yuanjiacun Formation in the lower Lüliang Group, and was interpreted to be deposited at 2.3-2.1 Ga, based on ages of overlying and underlying volcanic strata. This age overlaps with the time range of the Great Oxidation Event (GOE, 2.4-2.2 Ga). The Yuanjiacun BIF consists mainly of subhedral-xenomorphic magnetite and quartz and rarely other minerals with a lower degree of metamorphism, from greenschist to lower amphibolite facies. The geochemical characteristics of this BIF are similar to those of Superior-type BIFs. Prominent positive La, Y, and Eu anomalies normalized by the Post Archean Australian Shale (PAAS) indicate that the primary chemical precipitate is a result of solutions that represent mixtures of seawater and high-T hydrothermal fluids. The contamination from crustal detritus found is negligible based on low abundances of AlO and TiO (<0.5%) and of trace elements such as Th, Hf, Zr, and Sc (<1.5 ppm), as well as the lack of co-variations between AlO and TiO. In particular, the Yuanjiacun BIF samples do not display significant negative Ce anomalies like those of the Archean iron formations, but rather, the Yuanjiacun BIF samples exhibit prominent positive Ce anomalies, low Y/Ho ratios, and high light to heavy REE ((Pr/Yb)) ratios, which are essentially consistent with the late Paleoproterozoic (<2.0 Ga) BIFs around the world. These characteristics of the Yuanjiacun BIF samples imply that the ancient ocean (2.3-2.1 Ga) was redox-stratified from oxic shallow water to deeper anoxic water. The specific redox conditions of the ancient ocean may be related to the GOE, which gave rise to the oxidation of Ce and Mn in the upper water, and to the presence of a Mn oxide shuttle in the ocean, resulting in varying REE patterns due to the precipitation and dissolution of this Mn oxide shuttle under different redox states. Therefore, the Yuanjiacun BIF appears to have formed near the redoxcline and lower-level reduced marine water.
- Subjects
CHINA; RARE earth metals; YTTRIUM; OXIDATION; IRON ores; SEAWATER; SEDIMENTARY rocks; GREAT Oxidation Event
- Publication
SCIENCE CHINA Earth Sciences, 2014, Vol 57, Issue 10, p2469
- ISSN
1674-7313
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s11430-014-4896-2