microspherulite
Microspherulites are microscopic spherical particles with diameter less than two mm, usually in the 100 micrometre range, mainly consisting of mineral material (the Greek litos means "stone"). Only bodies created by natural physico-chemical processes, with no contribution of either biological (in aqueous sedimentary environments this contribution is possible) or human activity, are considered to be microspherulites.
Generally speaking, the common feature (sphericity) indicates that each sphere represents an internal equilibrium of forces within a fluid medium (water, air).
Classification
=Aqueous environment=
File:Detailed group of oolites.jpg
- Oolites are internally structured spheres, composed mainly by calcium carbonate (Figure 1). They are a type of constituent in limestone. The size of these ooids ranges between 0.25 and 2 mm. The name derives from the Greek {{Transliteration|grc|ooion}} (egg). They are formed by growing larger and accreting material as they move around. They accomplish this either (a) by physical attachment of fine-grained material as they roll around, much in the manner of a snowball, and (b) by the chemical precipitation of material in solution, much as salt crystallizes from water during evaporation. In the former case they have thin concentric layers, and in the latter they have radiating sprays of crystals. However, a combination of both processes can be found. Microbes could contribute to their development.
=Aerial environment=
- Micrometeorites are typically metallic microspherules (iron or iron and nickel) but can also be formed by silicate minerals, whose dimensions must range from tens of micrometres to one millimetre. They correspond to pieces of extraterrestrial meteoroids, resulting from melting and vaporization during entry into the Earth’s atmosphere. During this melt stage a significant loss of mass can occur through holes in their surface. The degree of heating and their original composition determine that only a few minerals have been founded in micrometeorites. They have not yet been properly classified.
- Impact spherulites occur when a large extraterrestrial object strikes Earth at cosmic velocity, melts and vaporizes, silicate materials can condense into high spheroidal, sand-sized particles deposited around the point of impact. Unaltered impact spherulites consist entirely of glass (microtektites) or a combination of glass and crystals grown in flight (microkrystites). Primary crystals are only common in microspherulites from two Phanerozoic impact layers: the Upper Eocene microkrystite or clinopyroxene spherule layer Glass, B.P., Burns, C.A., Crosbie, J.R., DuBois, D.L., 1985. Late Eocene North American Microtektites and Clinopyroxene-Bearing Spherules, Proceedings of the Sixteenth Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. Part 1. Journal of Geophysical Research 90, D 175-D 196. and the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary (K/T boundary) layer.Smit, J., 1999: The global stratigraphy of the. Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary impact ejecta. Annu. Rev. Earth Planetary Science, 27: 75-113. [http://arjournals.annualreviews.org/action/doSearch?action=runSearch&type=advanced&result=true&prevSearch=%2Bauthorsfield%3A(Smit%2C+J.)] Other crystalline phases may be olivine, Fe-rich pyroxene, spinels and feldspars. Frequently the crystals are replaced by diagenetic phases such as goethite, pyrite, glauconite, K-feldspars, quartz, sericite, chlorite, and carbonates.
- Iberulites are co-associations of well-defined minerals, together with non-crystalline compounds, with axial geometry and a characteristic depression (vortex), structured around a coarse-grained core with a smectite rind, and pinkish colour (Figure 2). They are formed at present in the troposphere by complex aerosol-water-gas interactions. The modal size is in the 60-90 micrometre range, and the shapes are almost perfect spheres. Their name comes from the Iberian Peninsula, indicating the place where they were discovered.Díaz-Hernández, J.L., 2000. Aportaciones sólidas a la atmósfera originadas por un incendio forestal en el ámbito mediterráneo. Estudios Geológicos 56, 153–161. [http://estudiosgeol.revistas.csic.es/index.php/estudiosgeol/article/viewFile/147/146] They are related to intrusions of aerosol plumes from the Sahara desert. The mineralogy of the core (tens of micrometres thick) is commonly formed by quartz, calcite, dolomite and feldspars, while the most frequent minerals of the rind (a few micrometres thick) are clay minerals, mainly smectites (beidellite, montmorillonite) and illite, amorphous silica and impregnation of sulfate minerals (mainly gypsum, alunite and jarosite) and chlorides.Díaz-Hernández, J.L., Párraga, 2008. The nature and tropospheric formation of iberulites: Pinkish mineral microspherulites. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72, 3883–3906.
[https://archive.today/20130104201101/http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6V66-4SMF02R-2&_user=4628667&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000063621&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=4628667&md5=5843fd2d6d65e0463f855c71151fb906]
References
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