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Facies variability and depositional cyclicity in central Northern Switzerland: insights from new Opalinus Clay drill cores

The Opalinus Clay, a silty to sandy claystone formation, Early to Middle Jurassic (Toarcian and Aalenian) in age, has been selected as the host rock for deep subsurface disposal of radioactive waste in Switzerland. Over the past thirty years, numerous geotechnical, mineralogical, and sedimentologica...

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Published in:Swiss Journal of geosciences 2024-12, Vol.117 (1), p.18-29, Article 18
Main Authors: Zimmerli, Géraldine N., Wohlwend, Stephan, Deplazes, Gaudenz, Becker, Jens, Wetzel, Andreas, Francescangeli, Fabio, Foubert, Anneleen
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description The Opalinus Clay, a silty to sandy claystone formation, Early to Middle Jurassic (Toarcian and Aalenian) in age, has been selected as the host rock for deep subsurface disposal of radioactive waste in Switzerland. Over the past thirty years, numerous geotechnical, mineralogical, and sedimentological studies have been conducted on the Opalinus Clay within the framework of the Nagra (National Cooperative for the Disposal of Radioactive Waste) deep drilling campaigns and the Mont Terri Project, an international research program dedicated to the study of claystone. The present study aims to unravel the variability of the lateral and vertical facies of the Opalinus Clay in central Northern Switzerland and to place this variability in a regional and basinal context. Analyses of new cores drilled in central Northern Switzerland, including petrographic, mineralogical (X-ray diffraction, multi-mineral interpretation), geochemical (X-ray fluorescence), statistical (non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis), and bedding dip and azimuth data, shed new light on the depositional facies and the spatial and temporal variability of the Opalinus Clay. Petrographic descriptions encompass nine new drill cores using a revised subfacies/facies classification scheme based on texture (colour, grain size, bedding) and composition (mineralogy). Particularly, one new subfacies (SF6) is described and interpreted as mass-wasting deposits. The drill cores are correlated laterally using specific marker horizons. This correlation is achieved by combining thorough facies investigations with lithostratigraphy, biostratigraphy, and chemostratigraphy. Six to seven small coarsening-upward cycles and two long-term coarsening-upward sequences can be interpreted as regressive trends. The observed trends are influenced by the interplay between sediment supply, eustatic sea level change, synsedimentary subsidence, but also the palaeogeographic configuration in an epicontinental sea, provenance and delivery of sediments, current dynamics and climate change. Finally, combined results show that the current dynamics in the Opalinus Clay has been underestimated until now and new depositional models, including the occurrence of drift deposits, are discussed.
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subjects Aalenian
Azimuth
Bedding
Biostratigraphy
Classification schemes
Clay
Clay minerals
Claystone
Climate change
Climate models
Cores
Cycles
Drilling
Drills
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Eustatic changes
Fluorescence
Geology
Grain size
Jurassic
Lithology
Mass-wasting deposits
Mineralogy
Minerals
Multidimensional scaling
Opalinus Clay
Radioactive waste disposal
Radioactive wastes
Research programmes
Scaling
Sea level changes
Sediment
Sedimentary facies
Sedimentation & deposition
Sediments
Temporal variations
Trends
Variability
X rays
X-ray diffraction
X-ray fluorescence
title Facies variability and depositional cyclicity in central Northern Switzerland: insights from new Opalinus Clay drill cores
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