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    An integrated study of geochemistry and mineralogy of the Upper Tukau Formation, Borneo Island (East Malaysia): Sediment provenance, depositional setting and tectonic implications

    252358.pdf (1.968Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Ramasamy, Nagarajan
    Roy, P.
    Kessler, F.
    Jong, J.
    Dayong, V.
    Jonathan, M.
    Date
    2017
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Ramasamy, N. and Roy, P. and Kessler, F. and Jong, J. and Dayong, V. and Jonathan, M. 2017. An integrated study of geochemistry and mineralogy of the Upper Tukau Formation, Borneo Island (East Malaysia): Sediment provenance, depositional setting and tectonic implications. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences. 143: pp. 77-94.
    Source Title
    Journal of Asian Earth Sciences
    DOI
    10.1016/j.jseaes.2017.04.002
    ISSN
    1367-9120
    School
    Curtin Sarawak
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/53089
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    An integrated study using bulk chemical composition, mineralogy and mineral chemistry of sedimentary rocks from the Tukau Formation of Borneo Island (Sarawak, Malaysia) is presented in order to understand the depositional and tectonic settings during the Neogene. Sedimentary rocks are chemically classified as shale, wacke, arkose, litharenite and quartz arenite and consist of quartz, illite, feldspar, rutile and anatase, zircon, tourmaline, chromite and monazite. All of them are highly matured and were derived from a moderate to intensively weathered source. Bulk and mineral chemistries suggest that these rocks were recycled from sedimentary to metasedimentary source regions with some input from granitoids and mafic-ultramafic rocks. The chondrite normalized REE signature indicates the presence of felsic rocks in the source region. Zircon geochronology shows that the samples were of Cretaceous and Triassic age. Comparable ages of zircon from the Tukau Formation sedimentary rocks, granitoids of the Schwaner Mountains (southern Borneo) and Tin Belt of the Malaysia Peninsular suggest that the principal provenance for the Rajang Group were further uplifted and eroded during the Neogene. Additionally, presence of chromian spinels and their chemistry indicate a minor influence of mafic and ultramafic rocks present in the Rajang Group. From a tectonic standpoint, the Tukau Formation sedimentary rocks were deposited in a passive margin with passive collisional and rift settings. Our key geochemical observation on tectonic setting is comparable to the regional geological setting of northwestern Borneo as described in the literature.

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