TY - JOUR
T1 - Ribbon rocks revisited
T2 - the upper Cambrian (Furongian) Hwajeol Formation, Taebaek Group, Korea
AU - Lee, Jeong Hyun
AU - Cho, Se Hyun
AU - Jung, Da Young
AU - Choh, Suk Joo
AU - Lee, Dong Jin
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by grants from the National Research Foundation of Korea to JHL (2019R1A2C4069278) and SJC (2018R1A2A2A05018469). We thank S.-W. Kwon for help with fieldwork and preparation of thin sections and sedimentary logs, and A. Munnecke, J. Wheeley and T. Nohl for their constructive comments. This study is a contribution to IGCP Project 735 “Rocks and the Rise of Ordovician Life: Filling knowledge gaps in the Early Palaeozoic Biodiversification”.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2021/7
Y1 - 2021/7
N2 - Alternations of thin-bedded limestone and shale, or ribbon rock, commonly occur throughout lower Palaeozoic carbonate successions; however, their formative processes are still unclear. In this study, we discuss the origin of the ribbon rocks of the upper Cambrian Hwajeol Formation, Korea, based on detailed microfacies analysis of a ~ 2-m-thick interval. Five sedimentary microfacies were identified: normally graded calcarenite to shale; parallel-laminated shale; lime mudstone; wackestone-to-packstone; and bioclastic–intraclastic packstone-to-conglomerate. Shale facies were most likely formed by frequent storm-induced bottom currents, whereas, lime mudstone facies were deposited in situ by suspension settling of micrite, mudflows, or growth of keratose sponges on the seafloor, and/or formed by early diagenetic growth. Conglomerate/packstone/wackestone indicate infrequent, larger-scale events, e.g., mega-storms, tsunamis, or earthquakes. We propose a new formative model for tempestite-type ribbon rock based on the Hwajeol example, and suggest that this model can be differentiated from the other types of ribbon rocks—tidalite, turbidite, and diagenetic types. Formation of the tempestite-type ribbon rocks would have been promoted by the characteristic environmental conditions of the early Palaeozoic, in particular sea-water chemistry that promoted calcite precipitation and the paucity of burrowers. Detailed microscopic observations can thus provide clues to elucidate previously unknown sedimentary processes in the deeper parts of carbonate platforms.
AB - Alternations of thin-bedded limestone and shale, or ribbon rock, commonly occur throughout lower Palaeozoic carbonate successions; however, their formative processes are still unclear. In this study, we discuss the origin of the ribbon rocks of the upper Cambrian Hwajeol Formation, Korea, based on detailed microfacies analysis of a ~ 2-m-thick interval. Five sedimentary microfacies were identified: normally graded calcarenite to shale; parallel-laminated shale; lime mudstone; wackestone-to-packstone; and bioclastic–intraclastic packstone-to-conglomerate. Shale facies were most likely formed by frequent storm-induced bottom currents, whereas, lime mudstone facies were deposited in situ by suspension settling of micrite, mudflows, or growth of keratose sponges on the seafloor, and/or formed by early diagenetic growth. Conglomerate/packstone/wackestone indicate infrequent, larger-scale events, e.g., mega-storms, tsunamis, or earthquakes. We propose a new formative model for tempestite-type ribbon rock based on the Hwajeol example, and suggest that this model can be differentiated from the other types of ribbon rocks—tidalite, turbidite, and diagenetic types. Formation of the tempestite-type ribbon rocks would have been promoted by the characteristic environmental conditions of the early Palaeozoic, in particular sea-water chemistry that promoted calcite precipitation and the paucity of burrowers. Detailed microscopic observations can thus provide clues to elucidate previously unknown sedimentary processes in the deeper parts of carbonate platforms.
KW - Early Palaeozoic
KW - Limestone–shale interlayer
KW - Parted limestone
KW - Ribbon carbonate
KW - Ribbon rock
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85105806749&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10347-021-00630-3
DO - 10.1007/s10347-021-00630-3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85105806749
SN - 0172-9179
VL - 67
JO - Facies
JF - Facies
IS - 3
M1 - 19
ER -