Abstract
A tourmaline depleted in Si has been found in the cement of Upper Rotliegend aeolian sandstone overlaying Lower Rotliegend volcanic rock in the 'Ługi-1' prospecting borehole near Jarocin in the Fore-Sudetic Monocline, south-western Poland. Tourmaline, representing Mg-bearing foitite, crystallized around quartz grains in the form of radial aggregates of tiny crystals, reaching only 1-2 μm in diameter. Due to the very small size of the tourmaline crystals and the presence of significant contents of transitional metals in the crystal lattice, only direct determination of B 2O 3 in nm-sized spots enables evaluation of [4]Al and [4]B. Compositions of the tourmaline in successive analytical spots show that Si deficiency is supplemented both by [4]Al (0.00 to 0.48 Al apfu) as well as by [4]B (0.00 to 0.83 B apfu) at varying proportions. The origin of the mineral was related to diagenesis of evaporate sediments inducing reactions of quartz and clay minerals as primary components in the tourmaline-bearing sandstone with Ca saturated pore brines rich in Cl - and (BO 3)3 -.
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Pieczka, A., Buniak, A., Majka, J., & Harryson, H. (2011). Si-deficient foitite with [4]Al and [4]B from the “Ługi-1” borehole, Southwestern Poland. Journal of Geosciences, 56(4), 389–398. https://doi.org/10.3190/jgeosci.105
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