Precipitation of dolomite from seawater on a Carnian coastal plain (Dolomites, northern Italy): evidence from carbonate petrography and Sr isotopes
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Published:2019-07-31
Issue:4
Volume:10
Page:1243-1267
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ISSN:1869-9529
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Container-title:Solid Earth
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Solid Earth
Author:
Rieder Maximilian, Wegner Wencke, Horschinegg Monika, Klackl Stefanie, Preto NereoORCID, Breda AnnaORCID, Gier Susanne, Klötzli UrsORCID, Bernasconi Stefano M.ORCID, Arp GernotORCID, Meister Patrick
Abstract
Abstract. The geochemical conditions conducive to dolomite formation in
shallow evaporitic environments along the Triassic Tethyan margin are still
poorly understood. Large parts of the Triassic dolomites in the Austroalpine
and the southern Alpine realm are affected by late diagenetic or
hydrothermal overprinting, but recent studies from the Carnian Travenanzes
Formation (southern Alps) provide evidence of primary dolomite. Here a
petrographic and geochemical study of dolomites intercalated in a
100 m thick Carnian sequence of distal alluvial plain deposits is presented
to gain better insight into the conditions and processes of dolomite
formation. The dolomites occur as 10 to 50 cm thick homogeneous beds,
millimetre-scale laminated beds, and nodules associated with palaeosols. The
dolomite is nearly stoichiometric with slightly attenuated ordering
reflections. Sedimentary structures indicate that the initial primary
dolomite or precursor phase consisted largely of unlithified mud. Strontium
isotope ratios (87Sr∕86Sr) of homogeneous and laminated dolomites
reflect Triassic seawater composition, suggesting precipitation in
evaporating seawater in a coastal ephemeral lake or sabkha system. However,
the setting differed from modern sabkha or coastal ephemeral lake systems by
being exposed to seasonally wet conditions with significant siliciclastic
input and the inhibition of significant lateral groundwater flow by
impermeable clay deposits. Thus, the ancient Tethyan margin was different
from modern analogues of primary dolomite formation.
Funder
FP7 People: Marie-Curie Actions
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Earth-Surface Processes,Geochemistry and Petrology,Geology,Geophysics,Soil Science
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