PALAEOPROTEROZOIC MAGNESITE: LITHOLOGICAL AND ISOTOPIC EVIDENCE FOR PLAYA/SABKHA ENVIRONMENTS

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dc.contributor.author Melezhik V.A.
dc.contributor.author Fallick A.E.
dc.contributor.author Medvedev P.V.
dc.contributor.author Makarikhin V.V.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-02-20T08:12:57Z
dc.date.available 2021-02-20T08:12:57Z
dc.date.issued 2001
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=13375560
dc.identifier.citation Sedimentology, 2001, 48, 2, 379-397
dc.identifier.issn 0037-0746
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/25272
dc.description.abstract Magnesite forms a series of 1- to 15-m-thick beds within the ≈2·0 Ga (Palaeoproterozoic) Tulomozerskaya Formation, NW Fennoscandian Shield, Russia. Drillcore material together with natural exposures reveal that the 680-m-thick formation is composed of a stromatolite–dolomite–‘red bed’ sequence formed in a complex combination of shallow-marine and non-marine, evaporitic environments. Dolomite-collapse breccia, stromatolitic and micritic dolostones and sparry allochemical dolostones are the principal rocks hosting the magnesite beds. All dolomite lithologies are marked by δ13C values from +7·1‰ to +11·6‰ (V-PDB) and δ18O ranging from 17·4‰ to 26·3‰ (V-SMOW). Magnesite occurs in different forms: finely laminated micritic; stromatolitic magnesite; and structureless micritic, crystalline and coarsely crystalline magnesite. All varieties exhibit anomalously high δ13C values ranging from +9·0‰ to +11·6‰ and δ18O values of 20·0–25·7‰. Laminated and structureless micritic magnesite forms as a secondary phase replacing dolomite during early diagenesis, and replaced dolomite before the major phase of burial. Crystalline and coarsely crystalline magnesite replacing micritic magnesite formed late in the diagenetic/metamorphic history. Magnesite apparently precipitated from sea water-derived brine, diluted by meteoric fluids. Magnesitization was accomplished under evaporitic conditions (sabkha to playa lake environment) proposed to be similar to the Coorong or Lake Walyungup coastal playa magnesite. Magnesite and host dolostones formed in evaporative and partly restricted environments; consequently, extremely high δ13C values reflect a combined contribution from both global and local carbon reservoirs. A 13C-rich global carbon reservoir (δ13C at around +5‰) is related to the perturbation of the carbon cycle at 2·0 Ga, whereas the local enhancement in 13C (up to +12‰) is associated with evaporative and restricted environments with high bioproductivity.
dc.subject Carbon
dc.subject dolomite
dc.subject isotopes
dc.subject magnesite
dc.subject oxygen
dc.subject Palaeoproterozoic
dc.subject playa
dc.subject red beds
dc.subject sabkha
dc.subject stromatolite
dc.title PALAEOPROTEROZOIC MAGNESITE: LITHOLOGICAL AND ISOTOPIC EVIDENCE FOR PLAYA/SABKHA ENVIRONMENTS
dc.type Статья
dc.subject.age Precambrian::Proterozoic::Paleoproterozoic en
dc.subject.age Докембрий::Протерозой::Палеопротерозойская ru


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