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Título
The alteration of Miraflores Basalt (Panama): Mineralogical and textural evolution
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Palagonite
Idingsite
Bentonite
Basalt alteration
Miraflores basalt
Panama Canal
Clasificación UNESCO
2506 Geología
Fecha de publicación
2021
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Emilia García-Romero, Mercedes Suárez, The alteration of Miraflores Basalt (Panama): Mineralogical and textural evolution, Applied Clay Science, Volume 205, 2021, 106036, ISSN 0169-1317, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clay.2021.106036. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169131721000600)
Resumen
[EN]Samples of The Miraflores Basalt sub-volcanic rocks (Miocene Late Basalt Formation) collected from different
quarries on the Isthmus of Panama and several samples collected from the excavation of the third set of locks in
the New Panama Channel were characterised in this study. All rocks studied had similar petrological and
mineralogical characteristics; however, the samples had substantially different degrees of alteration, which
varied in the NW–SE direction. The most altered areas were located at the SE (Sosa Hill Quarry), next to the
Pacific Ocean, while the Cerro Escobar rocks, located further inland, showed only slight alteration. The rocks
from the excavation and from the Cocolí and Aguadulce Hills area, located in the middle of the study region,
exhibit features consistent with intermediate alteration between the two aforementioned extreme cases. Images
and data from different alteration stages were obtained using optical microscopy, electron microprobe (EMP),
and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The earliest stage of alteration was characterised by the presence of
iddingsite, which was almost the only product of alteration. As the alteration progressed, the generalisation of
smectites throughout the rock was characteristic. The glass disappeared and transformed to palagonite, and the
plagioclase and pyroxene crystals became altered both at the edges and inside the crystals. The crystals also
showed numerous nanofractures, which were mainly perpendicular to the longer faces and that were filled by
smectite. In the most advanced alteration state, all crystals and glass were deeply affected. Crystals were deeply
transformed into smectite, and the porosity of the rock increased in a process that conserved the volume.
Smectite appeared as the end-alteration product both from the major minerals (olivine, plagioclase, pyroxenes),
as well as from the glass.
URI
ISSN
0169-1317
DOI
10.1016/j.clay.2021.106036
Versión del editor
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- DGL. Artículos [364]












