Textural and mineralogical characterization of the late Pliensbachian-early Toarcian sediments of the Cleveland Basin, Yorkshire, U.K.
Summary
The compositional characteristics of shales are inherently variable and the governing
controls and depositional processes resulting in different facies can be expressed by the
texture and mineralogy of sediments. The development of quartz grain size and
mineralogy over the late Pliensbachian–early Toarcian shale succession of the Cleveland
Basin is investigated using Scanning Electron Microscopy combined with Energy Dispersive
X-ray analysis (SEM-EDX) to determine the distribution and overall content of quartz
grains, while the clay mineral composition, in both qualitative and (semi-) qualitative
sense, is determined by X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD). Due to the small grain size and
difficulties of processing well cemented shales, no full evaluation of quartz grain size
distributions over the course of the entire succession, and their relationship to the clay
mineralogy, has ever been established. The results indicate that the current
lithostratigraphic subdivisions yield no resemblance to the variability of the sedimentological
properties of the shales, as determined on basis of quartz grain size distributions
and clay mineralogy.