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Morrow, D. W., 1978

Dolomitization of Lower Paleozoic burrow-fillings

Morrow, David W.
DOI
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1306/212F745A-2B24-11D7-8648000102C1865D
Year1978
JournalJournal of Sedimentary Petrology
Volume48
Number1
Pages295-306
Typearticle in journal
LanguageEnglish
Id51341

Abstract

Dolomite in an upper Ordovician sequence composed of the Irene Bay and Thumb Mountain Formations on Devon Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago is confined to burrows. Micron-sized dolomite crystals may have formed in burrows contemporaneous with deposition because of seasonal salinity changes in the Irene Bay-Thumb Mountain shelf lagoon. These penecontemporaneous dolomite crystals formed nuclei for the selective precipitation of late diagenetic dolomite from dilute subsurface solutions. Post-lithification crystal growth during late diagenesis caused idiotopic dolnmite fabrics with intercrystalliae micrite to become more coarsely crystalfine xenotopic fabrics with no intercrystalline micrite. Dolomite crystal growth was accompanied by a progressive decrease in strontium and sodium contents and by a lowering of the amount of excess calcium. A possible rule regarding dolomite compositional variations is that high Mg/Ca solution ratios favor precipitation of more stoichiometric dolomite whereas low Mg/Ca solution ratios favour precipitation of calcium-rich dolomite with the exception that solutions of very low salinities will precipitate stoichiometric dolomite regardless of their Mg/Ca solution ratios.

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