The Totumo mud volcano and its near-shore marine sedimentological setting (North Colombia): From sedimentary volcanism to epithermal mineralization

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Harald G. Dill
  • S. Kaufhold

Organisationseinheiten

Externe Organisationen

  • Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe (BGR)
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)14-31
Seitenumfang18
FachzeitschriftSedimentary Geology
Jahrgang366
Frühes Online-Datum2 Feb. 2018
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Apr. 2018

Abstract

The Holocene mud volcano exposed at Totumo (younger than 4150 ± 50 yr BP) lines up together with some other landforms of its kind along the Caribbean Coast in northern Colombia. It currently vents a mud of the silicate-phosphate-bearing sulfur-sodium chloride type. The mud volcanoes evolved in an active continental margin setting of the South American Cordillera with high seismicity and affected by pervasive neotectonic structural disturbances. During the Neogene and Quaternary linear terrigenous shoreline sediments alternating with delta deposits evolved on this mobile crustal segment between the Andes and ancient Precambrian cratons. Meso- to microtidal sedimentary settings during transgression and progradation created meta- to instable sedimentary and petrophysical conditions (e.g. overpressure and gas-bearing bubble sands), favorable for the formation of mud volcanoes, whose lithofacies is subdivided into (1) footwall facies (detritus from metabasic, -pelitic source rocks), (2) mud volcano plus lateral facies (material from deep-seated hydrothermal sources, hydrocarbon plays, and brine reflux from the sea), (3) hanging wall facies, sand characterized by a strong longshore drift. The sedimentary volcanism in the area is characterized by different temperatures of formation: (1) pre-stage (<100 °C) and (2) recent stage (≈25 °C). Heavy (pyroxene, amphibole, epidote-clinozoisite, Fe-Ti silicates and oxides, garnet, alumosilicates, tourmaline, zircon, barite, Fe sulfides and -sulfates), light (Ca sulfates, calcite, quartz, feldspar) and clay minerals (kaolinite, mica, pyrophyllite, chlorite, vermiculite) are efficient tools to determine the source of mud, to subdivide the mud volcano system as to its facies and describe its physical-chemical regime as to the temperature of formation, pH and Eh values. The mud volcano system of Totumo bridges the gap between sedimentary “volcanism” and epithermal hot spring deposits of intermediate to high sulfidation and forms a useful “guide” to hydrocarbon accumulation.

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The Totumo mud volcano and its near-shore marine sedimentological setting (North Colombia): From sedimentary volcanism to epithermal mineralization. / Dill, Harald G.; Kaufhold, S.
in: Sedimentary Geology, Jahrgang 366, 04.2018, S. 14-31.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

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AU - Dill, Harald G.

AU - Kaufhold, S.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2018 Elsevier B.V.

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Y1 - 2018/4

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