The texture of an english fuller's earth
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- Published by Mineralogical Society in Clay Minerals
- Vol. 17 (2) , 255-258
- https://doi.org/10.1180/claymin.1982.017.2.11
Abstract
It is generally agreed that the English mid-Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous fuller's earths were derived from volcanic ash. In the Lower Cretaceous fuller's earth of Woburn, Kerr (1932) recognized partially decomposed relics of shards in a matrix of montmorillonite, and Grim (1933, 1935) described montmorillonite pseudomorphs after glass fragments in the Bath fuller's earth of Bathonian age. Jeans et al. (1977) published twenty-two SEM pictures of pyroclasts, including sanidine, sphene, trachytic pumice, and a basaltic glass fragment. Photomicrographs of the Lower Cretaceous fuller's earth show shard relicts ranging in length from 0·8-1·26 mm (median ∼1·12 mm) and in thickness from 5-15µm (Jeans et al., 1977, fig. 14a). However, much remains obscure about the shape, size and mode of packing of the argillized vitric particles which make up the bulk of fuller's earths. This note describes the texture of an English fuller's earth which was freeze-fractured (Tessier, 1978), prior to examination with a scanning electron microscope.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Origin of Middle Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous fuller's earths in EnglandClay Minerals, 1977
- Petrography of fuller's earth deposits; discussionEconomic Geology, 1935
- Petrography of the fuller's earth deposits, Olmstead, Illinois, with a brief study of some non-Illinois earthsEconomic Geology, 1933