CALCIUM-ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION IN SELECTED MODERN AND ANCIENT MARINE CARBONATES

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dc.contributor.author Steuber T.
dc.contributor.author Buhl D.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-04-20T09:00:50Z
dc.date.available 2024-04-20T09:00:50Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=12091616
dc.identifier.citation Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 2006, 70, 22, 5507-5521
dc.identifier.issn 0016-7037
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/43738
dc.description.abstract The calcium-isotope composition (?44/42Ca) was analyzed in modern, Cretaceous and Carboniferous marine skeletal carbonates as well as in bioclasts, non-skeletal components, and diagenetic cements of Cretaceous and Carboniferous limestones. In order to gain insight in Ca2+aq-CaCO3-isotope fractionation mechanisms in marine carbonates, splits of samples were analyzed for Sr, Mg, Fe, and Mn concentrations and for their oxygen and carbon isotopic composition. Biological carbonates generally have lower ?44/42Ca values than inorganic marine cements, and there appears to be no fractionation between seawater and marine inorganic calcite. A kinetic isotope effect related to precipitation rate is considered to control the overall discrimination against 44Ca in biological carbonates when compared to inorganic precipitates. This is supported by a well-defined correlation of the ?44/42Ca values with Sr concentrations in Cretaceous limestones that contain biological carbonates at various stages of marine diagenetic alteration. No significant temperature dependence of Ca-isotope fractionation was found in shells of Cretaceous rudist bivalves that have recorded large seasonal temperature variations as derived from ?18O values and Mg concentrations. The reconstruction of secular variations in the ?44/42Ca value of seawater from well preserved skeletal calcite is compromised by a broad range of variation found in both modern and Cretaceous biological carbonates, independent of chemical composition or mineralogy. Despite these variations that may be due to still unidentified biological fractionation mechanisms, the ?44/42Ca values of Cretaceous skeletal calcite suggest that the ?44/42Ca value of Cretaceous seawater was 0.3-0.4? lower than that of the modern ocean.
dc.subject CALCIUM
dc.subject CARBONATE SEDIMENT
dc.subject CARBONIFEROUS
dc.subject CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
dc.subject CRETACEOUS
dc.subject DIAGENESIS
dc.subject ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION
dc.subject ISOTOPIC FRACTIONATION
dc.subject LIMESTONE
dc.subject MARINE ENVIRONMENT
dc.subject MINERALOGY
dc.subject SEAWATER
dc.subject BIVALVIA
dc.title CALCIUM-ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION IN SELECTED MODERN AND ANCIENT MARINE CARBONATES
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.gca.2006.08.028
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Каменноугольная
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Carboniferous


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