TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermal maturity of the Hawasina units and origin of the Batinah Mélange (Oman Mountains)
T2 - Insights from clay minerals
AU - Aldega, L.
AU - Carminati, E.
AU - Scharf, A.
AU - Mattern, F.
N1 - Funding Information:
Financial support from Progetti di Ateneo 2018 (RM118164132CF087), 2020 (RG12017293F4F528) to Luca Aldega and Progetti di Ateneo 2019 (RM11916B41AE51A2) to Eugenio Carminati is acknowledged. We also thankfully acknowledge field discussions with M. Mattei, F. Cifelli and L. Smeraglia. H. Al-Zidi (Sultan Qaboos University) is thanked for assistance in sample preparation. The paper benefited from fruitful suggestions and comments by Stefano Tavani and an anonymous reviewer.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/11
Y1 - 2021/11
N2 - The Oman Mountains developed during Cretaceous to Cenozoic time by obduction of the Semail Ophiolite on top of the Arabian rifted margin. The tectonic pile of the orogenic system is composed of three major domains, which from bottom to top are: (i) the proximal domain of the Arabian rifted margin; (ii) the Hawasina Nappe, including rocks pertaining to the distal portions of the Arabian rifted margin; (iii) the Upper Cretaceous Semail Ophiolite. However, in NE Oman (Batinah Coastal Plain), exposures of Hawasina rocks are resting above the ophiolite. What is the origin of the uncommon structural position of Hawasina rocks in the Batinah Coastal Plain? To address this question, an extensive dataset of X-ray diffraction analyses from rocks of the Hawasina units has been used to reconstruct their thermal and burial history since the Late Cretaceous. Temperature-dependent clay minerals indicate that the Hawasina units experienced different levels of thermal maturity from early diagenetic to anchizone conditions depending on their structural position during orogenic build-up. Rocks from the Hawasina units resting above the ophiolite contain random-ordered mixed layer illite-smectite (I–S) with an illite content between 30 and 45% displaying low levels of thermal maturity reflecting early diagenetic conditions that were acquired because of limited sedimentary burial (600 m) and minor heating during the early Pliocene. Deep-water rocks of the Hawasina units below the ophiolite are characterized by long-range ordered mixed layer I–S with an illite content between 80 and 90% and by a mineralogical assemblage of rectorite and pyrophyllite displaying more evolved levels of thermal maturity in deep diagenetic/anchizone conditions that were acquired during the obduction of the 4100 to 5500 m thick Semail Ophiolite. We finally propose a new evolutionary scheme for the genesis of the Batinah Mélange, that was not buried by the ophiolite but was transported by gravity-driven mass transport on top of the ophiolite. Our results may further improve the assessment of thermal maturity of Arabian passive margin deposits for hydrocarbon exploration purposes.
AB - The Oman Mountains developed during Cretaceous to Cenozoic time by obduction of the Semail Ophiolite on top of the Arabian rifted margin. The tectonic pile of the orogenic system is composed of three major domains, which from bottom to top are: (i) the proximal domain of the Arabian rifted margin; (ii) the Hawasina Nappe, including rocks pertaining to the distal portions of the Arabian rifted margin; (iii) the Upper Cretaceous Semail Ophiolite. However, in NE Oman (Batinah Coastal Plain), exposures of Hawasina rocks are resting above the ophiolite. What is the origin of the uncommon structural position of Hawasina rocks in the Batinah Coastal Plain? To address this question, an extensive dataset of X-ray diffraction analyses from rocks of the Hawasina units has been used to reconstruct their thermal and burial history since the Late Cretaceous. Temperature-dependent clay minerals indicate that the Hawasina units experienced different levels of thermal maturity from early diagenetic to anchizone conditions depending on their structural position during orogenic build-up. Rocks from the Hawasina units resting above the ophiolite contain random-ordered mixed layer illite-smectite (I–S) with an illite content between 30 and 45% displaying low levels of thermal maturity reflecting early diagenetic conditions that were acquired because of limited sedimentary burial (600 m) and minor heating during the early Pliocene. Deep-water rocks of the Hawasina units below the ophiolite are characterized by long-range ordered mixed layer I–S with an illite content between 80 and 90% and by a mineralogical assemblage of rectorite and pyrophyllite displaying more evolved levels of thermal maturity in deep diagenetic/anchizone conditions that were acquired during the obduction of the 4100 to 5500 m thick Semail Ophiolite. We finally propose a new evolutionary scheme for the genesis of the Batinah Mélange, that was not buried by the ophiolite but was transported by gravity-driven mass transport on top of the ophiolite. Our results may further improve the assessment of thermal maturity of Arabian passive margin deposits for hydrocarbon exploration purposes.
KW - Batinah mélange
KW - Hawasina units
KW - Mixed layer illite-smectite
KW - Oman Mountains
KW - Thermal modelling
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U2 - 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2021.105316
DO - 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2021.105316
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85114122273
SN - 0264-8172
VL - 133
JO - Marine and Petroleum Geology
JF - Marine and Petroleum Geology
M1 - 105316
ER -