Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Discovery of halloysite books in altered silicic Quaternary tephras, northern New Zealand

View through CrossRef
AbstractHydrated halloysite was discovered in books, a morphology previously associated exclusively with kaolinite. From ∼1.5 to ∼1500 μm in length, the books showed significantly greater mean Fe contents (Fe2O3= 5.2 wt.%) than tubes (Fe2O3= 3.2 wt.%), and expanded rapidly with formamide. They occurred, along with halloysite tubes, spheroids and plates, in highly porous yet poorly permeable, silt-dominated, Si-rich, pumiceous rhyolitic tephra deposits aged ∼0.93 Ma (Te Puna tephra) and ∼0.27 Ma (Te Ranga tephra) at three sites ∼10–20 m stratigraphically below the modern landsurface in the Tauranga area, eastern North Island, New Zealand. The book-bearing tephras were at or near saturation, but have experienced intermittent partial drying, favouring the proposed changes: solubilized volcanic glass + plagioclase→halloysite spheroids→halloysite tubes→halloysite plates→ halloysite books. Unlike parallel studies elsewhere involving both halloysite and kaolinite, kaolinite has not formed in Tauranga presumably because the low permeability ensures that the sites largely remain locally wet so that the halloysite books are metastable. An implication of the discovery is that some halloysite books in similar settings may have been misidentified previously as kaolinite.
Title: Discovery of halloysite books in altered silicic Quaternary tephras, northern New Zealand
Description:
AbstractHydrated halloysite was discovered in books, a morphology previously associated exclusively with kaolinite.
From ∼1.
5 to ∼1500 μm in length, the books showed significantly greater mean Fe contents (Fe2O3= 5.
2 wt.
%) than tubes (Fe2O3= 3.
2 wt.
%), and expanded rapidly with formamide.
They occurred, along with halloysite tubes, spheroids and plates, in highly porous yet poorly permeable, silt-dominated, Si-rich, pumiceous rhyolitic tephra deposits aged ∼0.
93 Ma (Te Puna tephra) and ∼0.
27 Ma (Te Ranga tephra) at three sites ∼10–20 m stratigraphically below the modern landsurface in the Tauranga area, eastern North Island, New Zealand.
The book-bearing tephras were at or near saturation, but have experienced intermittent partial drying, favouring the proposed changes: solubilized volcanic glass + plagioclase→halloysite spheroids→halloysite tubes→halloysite plates→ halloysite books.
Unlike parallel studies elsewhere involving both halloysite and kaolinite, kaolinite has not formed in Tauranga presumably because the low permeability ensures that the sites largely remain locally wet so that the halloysite books are metastable.
An implication of the discovery is that some halloysite books in similar settings may have been misidentified previously as kaolinite.

Related Results

Halloysite nanotubes: prospects and challenges of their use as additives and carriers – A focused review
Halloysite nanotubes: prospects and challenges of their use as additives and carriers – A focused review
AbstractThere is increasing research interest in potential applications of halloysite as fillers for polymer composites, controlled drug delivery, carriers for the supply and susta...
Elektro Çekim Yöntemi ile Haloysit Katkılı Biyo-Bazlı Termoplastik Poliüretan Nanolif Üretimi ve Karakterizasyonu
Elektro Çekim Yöntemi ile Haloysit Katkılı Biyo-Bazlı Termoplastik Poliüretan Nanolif Üretimi ve Karakterizasyonu
In this study, it was aimed to produce biocomposite nanofibers by using electrospinning technique and to form biocomposite structure, bio-based thermoplastic polyurethane (BioTPU) ...
An overview of distal tephrochronology in northern Europe during the last 1000 years
An overview of distal tephrochronology in northern Europe during the last 1000 years
Several tephra layers from the last millennium have been identified in distal peat and lake sediment sequences in northern Europe, forming a framework of volcanic events of great v...
Unique but diverse: some observations on the formation, structure and morphology of halloysite
Unique but diverse: some observations on the formation, structure and morphology of halloysite
AbstractNew insights from the recent literature are summarized and new data presented concerning the formation, structure and morphology of halloysite. Halloysite formation by weat...
Late Quaternary tephrostratigraphy of Baegdusan and Ulleung Volcanoes using marine sediments in the Japan Sea/East Sea
Late Quaternary tephrostratigraphy of Baegdusan and Ulleung Volcanoes using marine sediments in the Japan Sea/East Sea
Only Ulleung and Baegdusan volcanoes have produced alkaline tephras in the Japan Sea/East Sea during the Quaternary. Little is known about their detailed tephrostratigraphy, except...
Halloysite in Different Ceramic Products: A Review
Halloysite in Different Ceramic Products: A Review
The increased demands of our rapidly developing way of life lead to the broadening of the ceramic market among other effects. Due to the advanced ceramic properties of halloysite a...

Back to Top