Dolomitization of Lower Paleozoic burrow-fillings
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1306/212F745A-2B24-11D7-8648000102C1865D |
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Aasta | 1978 |
Ajakiri | Journal of Sedimentary Petrology |
Köide | 48 |
Number | 1 |
Leheküljed | 295-306 |
Tüüp | artikkel ajakirjas |
Keel | inglise |
Id | 51341 |
Abstrakt
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.