9. CLAY MINERAL DISTRIBUTION AND SIGNIFICANCE IN QUATERNARY SEDIMENTS OF THE AMAZON FAN1

P. Debrabant,2 M. Lopez,2 and H. Chamley2

ABSTRACT

The clay mineral assemblages of samples from the Amazon Fan were investigated in middle Pleistocene to Holocene sediments from 16 Ocean Drilling Program Leg 155 sites and were placed in lithologic successions to study continental evolution and transport conditions. The sediments sampled along a transect parallel to the main channel reflect moderate differential settling processes, whereas those studied along a transect roughly parallel to the coast clearly suggest winnowing effects related to the North Brazil Current. High-resolution analyses of Holocene deposits reflect the dominant influence of downstream soil erosion relative to supply from the Andean range and the progressive increase of soil-derived relative to rock-derived outputs. The middle Pleistocene to uppermost Pleistocene and Holocene successions are marked by a constantly warm climatic background and by noticeable modifications in the rock-derived (illite, chlorite) and soil-derived (smectite, kaolinite) products. These products successively reflect sea-level changes, tectonic rejuvenation in the Andean range, regressive erosion, and rainfall increase.

1Flood, R.D., Piper, D.J.W., Klaus, A., and Peterson, L.C. (Eds.), 1997. Proc. ODP, Sci. Results, 155: College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program).
2Sédimentologie et Géodynamique, URA 719 du CNRS, Université de Lille, 59 655 Villenueuve d’Ascq, France.