『Abstract
The Imini deposit, just south of the Atlas Mountains of Morocco,
consists of three beds of manganese oxide ore in a slightly deformed
dolomite unit about 10 m thick, of Cenomanian-Turonian (Late Cretaceous)
age. The dolomite host is sugary textured, massive, and permeable;
dolomite occurs as nearly euhedral rhombs. Each ore bed is about
a meter thick and consists almost entirely of intergrowths of
pyrolusite and hollandite-family mineral (BaO up to 11% and PbO
up to 28%) with a flattened geode structure. Overlying the ore
beds are solution collapse breccias with dolomite clasts, janggunite
(Mn,Fe oxide) and dolomite matrix and pyrolusite-hollandite-calcite
cement. The ore, solution-collapse breccia, and coarsely recrystallized
pure dolomite are coextensive - a zone only 400 to 1,000 m wide
but 25 km long and elongate east-northeast-west-southwest.
Diagenetic features of the deposit are: recrystallized texture
of the dolomite, flattened geode structure of the ore, solution-collapse
breccia and associated draped laminae of the insoluble residues,
fossil replacement by Mn oxides, and zoned chert nodules with
inclusions. A mineralogic paragenesis shown independently in each
of these features from older to younger is (1) precursor carbonates,
(2) dolomite-janggunite, and (3) hollandite-pyrolusite-chert-calcite.
Diagenesis probably occurred during the Late Cretaceous in a mixing
zone of fresh and saline ground water, as similar diagenetic sequences
without manganese deposits are widely reported to have formed
in such environments. Carbon and oxygen isotope compositions of
carbonates and oxygen isotope compositions of chert show that
an increasing component of fresh meteoric ground water was present
as diagenesis proceeded. Falling sea level allowed the mixing
zone to occupy various positions within the carbonate unit and
convert the primary calcareous carbonate rocks to dolomite with
chert nodules.
Anoxic seawater is known both worldwide and from the local depositional
basin (“Atlas gulf”) in the Cenomanian-Turonian. This is believed
to be the key to manganese deposition, becaquse anoxic conditions
greatly enhance mananese solubility. Two specific versions of
the mixing-zone model are presented for manganese deposition;
one in which a primary sedimentary manganese precipitate formed
along margins of the anoxic basin and was recrystallized during
diagenesis in the mixing zone, and the other in which anoxic saline
ground water brought manganese into the mixing zone, where it
precipitated.』
Objective of study
Description of the Imini manganese deposit
Dolomite
Ore and solution-collapse breccia
Original sedimentary features
Diagenetic features
Dolomite
Ore
Solution-collapse breccia and insoluble residue laminae
Fossil replacement
Chert nodules
Correlation and age of diagenetic features
Modern(?) karstic features
Ground-water mixing-zone model
Introduction
Application to the Imini deposit
Primary sedimentary manganese deposition modified by diagenesis
(submodel A)
Precipitation of manganese oxide in a ground-water mixing zone
(submodel B)
Evaluation of the alternative submodels
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References