Skip to main content
CASP Visit CASP website

Main

  • About Us
    • How We Can Help
    • A Bit of History
    • Our Status
    • People
    • Jobs
    • SEM Facility
    • Contact Us
    • News
    • Preventing Harm in Research and Innovation
  • Products
    • Geological Carbon Storage Research
    • Regional Research
    • Reports
    • Data Packages
    • Geological Collections and Data
  • Charity and Education
    • Publications
    • Meetings
    • The Robert Scott Research Fund
    • The Andrew Whitham CASP Fieldwork Awards
    • Outreach
  • Interactive Map
    • Arctic Region
    • China Region
    • East Africa Region
    • North Africa and Middle East Region
    • North Atlantic Region
    • Russia Region
    • South Atlantic Region
    • Southeast Europe to West Central Asia Region
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Deep burial dissolution of K-feldspars in a fluvial sandstone, Pentland Formation, UK Central North Sea

Deep burial dissolution of K-feldspars in a fluvial sandstone, Pentland Formation, UK Central North Sea

The Pentland Formation of the UK Central North Sea is a quartzite in a sequence of more arkosic sandstones. Provenance-sensitive heavy mineral indices are interpreted to indicate that it was probably derived by erosion of arkosic sediments, which also supplied the arkosic marine sandstones of the contemporaneous Fulmar Formation. A lack of apatite within the Pentland Formation suggests that the feldspars could have dissolved during exposure to groundwaters during very shallow burial. However, petrographic and geochemical evidence supports survival of at least some of the feldspar to burial depths in excess of at least 2 km, when the sandstones had been stabilized against compaction by quartz cements or overpressure. Abundant kaolin, which has not reacted to form illite, is preserved at burial depths in excess of 4000 m, suggesting an unusual lack of available potassium. There is a strong contrast in diagenetic pathways with the overlying marine Fulmar Formation, which most probably had the same initial composition but in which kaolin is absent and fibrous illite is present. It is suggested that a lower concentration of potassium (and aluminium) within the Pentland Formation compared with the probable source and the comparably sourced Fulmar Formation represents export of K from the sands on a metre scale.

Publication Details

  • Type

    Journal Article
  • Title

    Deep burial dissolution of K-feldspars in a fluvial sandstone, Pentland Formation, UK Central North Sea
  • Year

    2014
  • Author(s)

    Wilkinson, M., Haszeldine, R.S., Morton, A.C. and Fallick, A.E.
  • Journal

    Journal of the Geological Society
  • Volume

    171
  • Issue

    5
  • Page(s)

    635-647
  • URL

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/jgs2013-144
  • People

    • Andy Morton

Charity and Education

  • Publications
  • Meetings
  • The Robert Scott Research Fund
  • The Andrew Whitham CASP Fieldwork Awards
    • 2025 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2024 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2023 Fieldwork Award Winner
    • 2022 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2021 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2020 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2019 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2018 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2017 Fieldwork Award Winners
  • Outreach
  • © CASP A Not-For-Profit Organisation
  • Charity No. 298729
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn