Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern Finland

Opal precipitates have been found from eleven localities in eskers and ice-marginal formations in southern Finland. The precipitates occur above the present groundwater table in porous gravel layers near the surface. The depth is commonly around 1‒2 m. The precipitates build thin (up to 0.3 mm), ver...

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Main Authors: K.A. Kinnunen, L. Ikonen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geological Society of Finland 1991-12-01
Series:Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.geologinenseura.fi/bulletin/Volume63/sgs_bt_063_2_pages_095_104.pdf
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spelling doaj-0fe88bf92e2245fbb5d7fbce58a1d9962020-11-25T00:53:41ZengGeological Society of FinlandBulletin of the Geological Society of Finland0367-52111799-46321991-12-016329510410.17741/bgsf/63.2.003Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern FinlandK.A. KinnunenL. IkonenOpal precipitates have been found from eleven localities in eskers and ice-marginal formations in southern Finland. The precipitates occur above the present groundwater table in porous gravel layers near the surface. The depth is commonly around 1‒2 m. The precipitates build thin (up to 0.3 mm), very light grey, colloform coatings on pebbles, cobbles and boulders. The coatings are composed of fine opal microlayers (mean thickness 0.5 um). Optical and X-ray determinations show that the coatings are composed of opal of type-A (hyalite). Refractivity index is 1.446 (sodium light). The heated material gives X-ray diffraction lines of low-cristobalite. Optical spectroscopic observations show that traces of uranium cause the bright green fluorescence of these opals (under short-wave ultraviolet radiation). The coatings contain detrital minerals as inclusions and silicified organic remains: thin roots of plants and fungal hyphae. The model proposed for the formation of the opal coatings is hydromorphic precipitation from vadose water in the soil water zone. In the contacts of boulders and pebbles water evaporated episodically. This lead to supersaturation of silica in the water film. During each evaporation cycle silica coagulated from the water film and precipitated as one microlayer of opal. In the gravel deposits, the prerequisite for the opal formation was a porous texture with large empty voids. http://www.geologinenseura.fi/bulletin/Volume63/sgs_bt_063_2_pages_095_104.pdfprecipitationgraveloptical propertiesfluorescencepetrographysouthern Finland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K.A. Kinnunen
L. Ikonen
spellingShingle K.A. Kinnunen
L. Ikonen
Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern Finland
Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland
precipitation
gravel
optical properties
fluorescence
petrography
southern Finland
author_facet K.A. Kinnunen
L. Ikonen
author_sort K.A. Kinnunen
title Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern Finland
title_short Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern Finland
title_full Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern Finland
title_fullStr Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern Finland
title_full_unstemmed Opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern Finland
title_sort opal - a new hydromorphic precipitate type from gravel deposits in southern finland
publisher Geological Society of Finland
series Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland
issn 0367-5211
1799-4632
publishDate 1991-12-01
description Opal precipitates have been found from eleven localities in eskers and ice-marginal formations in southern Finland. The precipitates occur above the present groundwater table in porous gravel layers near the surface. The depth is commonly around 1‒2 m. The precipitates build thin (up to 0.3 mm), very light grey, colloform coatings on pebbles, cobbles and boulders. The coatings are composed of fine opal microlayers (mean thickness 0.5 um). Optical and X-ray determinations show that the coatings are composed of opal of type-A (hyalite). Refractivity index is 1.446 (sodium light). The heated material gives X-ray diffraction lines of low-cristobalite. Optical spectroscopic observations show that traces of uranium cause the bright green fluorescence of these opals (under short-wave ultraviolet radiation). The coatings contain detrital minerals as inclusions and silicified organic remains: thin roots of plants and fungal hyphae. The model proposed for the formation of the opal coatings is hydromorphic precipitation from vadose water in the soil water zone. In the contacts of boulders and pebbles water evaporated episodically. This lead to supersaturation of silica in the water film. During each evaporation cycle silica coagulated from the water film and precipitated as one microlayer of opal. In the gravel deposits, the prerequisite for the opal formation was a porous texture with large empty voids.
topic precipitation
gravel
optical properties
fluorescence
petrography
southern Finland
url http://www.geologinenseura.fi/bulletin/Volume63/sgs_bt_063_2_pages_095_104.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT kakinnunen opalanewhydromorphicprecipitatetypefromgraveldepositsinsouthernfinland
AT likonen opalanewhydromorphicprecipitatetypefromgraveldepositsinsouthernfinland
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