Journal of Asian Earth Sciences: X (Jun 2024)

Provenance of the lower Cretaceous Lumshiwal Formation, Surghar Range, northwestern Indian Plate, Pakistan: Insights from new petrographical and geochemical analysis

  • Muhammad Waseem Khan,
  • Saif Ur Rehman,
  • Sajjad Ahmed,
  • Shahid Jameel Sameeni

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
p. 100172

Abstract

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This paper documents the provenance and palaeoclimatic conditions of the Cretaceous Lumshiwal Formation near the western margin of the Indian plate in the Surghar Range, northwest Pakistan. The combined techniques of petrography, X-ray diffraction (XRD), and bulk rock geochemistry were utilized to reveal the source and mineral-geochemical composition and sandstone type. The petrographic analysis of the sandstones confirms the dominance of quartz, feldspar, and rock fragments, with subordinate occurrences of muscovite, magnetite, and hematite. Heavy minerals consist of tourmaline, titanite (sphene), rutile, cassiterite, monazite, and zircon. The cementing material includes ferruginous clays, jarosite, glauconite, calcite, minor dolomite, gypsum, and silica. The modal composition plot of the sandstones falls into arkose to sub-arkose, with a few lithic arkose varieties. Lithic fragments mainly include granite, with a minor occurrence of granitic gneiss, chert, phyllite, and quartz mica schist. The discriminatory provenance diagram of the sandstones suggests a transitional continental provenance. The bulk rock geochemistry of the sandstones reveals the presence of SiO2, TiO2, Al2O3, Fe2O3, FeO, MnO, CaO, MgO, Na2O, K2O and P2O5. The petrographical mineral findings were corroborated with XRD, SEM, and bulk rock geochemistry analysis (major element concentrations and their ratios), which collectively all confirm a felsic igneous source. The tectonic discrimination diagram (SiO2-log K2O/Na2O wt %) implies a dominant influx of sediment sourced from the passive continental margin of the uplifted Gondwana Indian plate. Terrigenous sediments found in the Lumshiwal Formation are interpreted to have been derived from granites and granitic gneisses of the Indian Shield. The palaeo-weathering index, including the chemical index of alteration (CIA) and the chemical index of weathering (CIW) of the Lumshiwal Formation confirms a low to moderately weathered source area. The climate discrimination plot (SiO2 versus Al2O3 + Na2O + K2O) shows that humid to semi-humid climatic conditions during the deposition of the Lumshiwal Formation.

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