Weathering of Basalt: Formation of Iddingsite
- 1 December 1987
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Clays and Clay Minerals
- Vol. 35 (6) , 418-428
- https://doi.org/10.1346/ccmn.1987.0350602
Abstract
The formation of iddingsite by the oxidative weathering of Fo80 olivine begins by solution of Mg from planar fissures, 20 Å wide and spaced 200 Å apart, parallel to (001). Oxidation of Fe within the remaining olivine provides nuclei for the topotactic growth of goethite. Cleavage cracks < 50 Å in diameter allow Na, Al, and Ca from adjacent minerals, particularly plagioclase, to enter the altering olivine while Mg and Si diffuse away. In the early stages of weathering, strips of Fe-rich smectite (saponite), 20–50 Å wide and 1–7 layers thick, form bridges 50–100 Å long across the planar fissures. Dioctahedral smectite crystallizes on the margins of wider cleavage-controlled fissures; with further weathering halloysite is formed away from the fissure walls. In the ultimate stages of alteration, the saponite and dioctahedral smectite are lost, leaving a porous, oriented aggregate of goethite crystals each measuring about 50 × 100 × 200 Å (X, Y, Z, respectively), with sporadic veins of halloysite crossing the pseudomorph.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Weathering of Basalt: Changes in Rock Chemistry and MineralogyClays and Clay Minerals, 1987
- Formation of Iddingsite Rims on Olivine: A Transmission Electron Microscope StudyClays and Clay Minerals, 1984
- Botryoidal Goethite: A Transmission Electron Microscope StudyClays and Clay Minerals, 1983
- An electron microscopy study of naturally occurring oxidation produced precipitates in iron-bearing olivinesContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 1975