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Middle Cretaceous black shales at Site 530 in the southeastern Angola Basin

January 13, 1984

The middle Cretaceous black shale interval at Site 530 is 170 m thick and late Albian to Coniacian in age. The organic-carbon-rich sediments occur as 260 separate beds (average 4 cm, maximum 60 cm thick) and make up less than 10% of the recovered section. Associated lithologies are greenish, grayish, and reddish mudstones, marlstones, and rare limestones. Organic-carbon contents of the black shales average about 5% (maximum 16%), and of the interbedded sediments, less than 0.5%. Careful study of the sedimentary and biogenic structures and composition and review of paleoceanographic conditions in the Angola Basin indicate that a complex interplay of processes controlled black shale accumulation. Relatively low oxygen concentrations in sediment and bottom waters occurred periodically, and conditions locally may have been anoxic or near anoxic both in the basin and on the continental margin. Pelagic, hemipelagic, and turbiditic depositional processes all operated to varying degrees at different times.

Publication Year 1984
Title Middle Cretaceous black shales at Site 530 in the southeastern Angola Basin
DOI 10.2973/dsdp.proc.75.120.1984
Authors D.A. Stow, Walter E. Dean
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Initial Reports of the D.S.D.P.
Index ID 70207797
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center