The kaolin deposits of the Amazon region of Brazil are of lateritic origin, modified by subsequent reduced lacustrine and/or
swamp environment. They are contemporaneous with lateritic bauxites found in the same region, all formed from aluminium silicate
rocks. These are principally sedimentary rocks from the Cretaceous period (Itapecuru and Alter do Chão), but also include
metamorphic and felsic volcanic rocks. After erosion of the upper part of these profiles they became locally a substratum
for swampy and/or lacustrine environments mostly developed over the clayey saprolitic horizon where kaolin occurs. The saprolitic
horizon is made up mainly of iron-mottled kaolinite which has been subject to an intense deferrification, which has increased
the kaolin brightness and thickness. The kaolins are basically made up of well-crystallized kaolinite, quartz, sometimes illite-muscovite,
anatase and hematite. In certain locations, crandallite-goyazite is also present. The deposits studied differ from each other
in the mineral content levels, concentration of principal elements and in trace element distribution. The greatest quantity
of quartz and, consequently SiO
2, is intrinsically related to the type of parent rock. Small sedimentary deposits occur in alluvial flood plains located not
very far from the lateritic source.
Received: 28 January 1996 / Accepted: 10 July 1997