ENVIRONMENTAL AND MICROBIAL INFLUENCE ON CHEMISTRY AND DOLOMITE FORMATION IN AN ANCIENT LAKE, GREEN RIVER FORMATION (EOCENE), UINTA BASIN, UTAH, USA

被引:3
|
作者
Pommer, Maxwell [1 ,2 ]
Sarg, Frederick [1 ]
Farlin, Forrest M. C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Colorado Sch Mines, Dept Geol & Geol Engn, Golden, CO 80401 USA
[2] Premier Corex, 11335 Clay Rd,Suite 180, Houston, TX 77041 USA
关键词
MIXING-ZONE DOLOMITIZATION; PICEANCE CREEK BASIN; DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENT; EXOPOLYMERIC SUBSTANCES; WESTERN VICTORIA; ORGANIC-MATTER; GOLDEN GROVE; LACUSTRINE; ORIGIN; CARBON;
D O I
10.2110/jsr.2022.016
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
Integrated stratigraphic, petrographic, and geochemical data allow interpretation of biogeochemical and mineralization processes in paleoenvironmental context of ancient lacustrine environments. These indicate that lake chemistry, microbial processes, and organic matter (OM) strongly influenced dolomite formation in near-surface environments throughout deposition of the Green River Formation (Eocene, Uinta basin, Utah). The lower Green River Formation consists of interbedded fluvio-deltaic siliciclastics, paleosols, carbonate mud, coated-grain carbonates, mollusk and ostracod limestones, and microbialites all landward of profundal OM-bearing illitic mudrocks. Calcite, dolomite, Fe-dolomite, and authigenic feldspars are common. Carbonate 818O and 813C are covariant, and positive excursions of carbonate 813C (up to 6.9% VPDB) and organic-matter 815N (up to 13.9% V -AIR) occur in profundal OM-bearing mudrocks. The upper Green River Formation consists mainly of laminated OM-lean and OM-rich dolomitic muds (i.e., "oil -shales"). Zoned dolomite crystals with Mg-calcite centers and Fe-dolomite rims are widespread in addition to authigenic feldspars and Na-carbonates. Carbonate 813C-enrichment (up to 15.8% VPDB), and organic-matter 815N -enrichment (up to 18.4% V-AIR) occur in these OM-rich dolomite muds. Organic-matter 813C is relatively invariable (mean 1/4 -29.3% VPDB) and does not covary with carbonate 813C. Trends in mineralogy, organic-matter abundance, and stable isotopes result from changing hydrologic systems, paleoclimate, lake chemistry and microbial processes coincident with the Early Eocene Climate Optimum. The lower Green River Formation paleo-lake was smaller in area and volume, heavily influenced by meteoric fluvial input, variably oxygenated, and ranged from neutral and fresh to alkaline and saline. Especially in littoral environments with abundant microbialites, dolomite formed through recrystallization of precursor carbonate involving both replacement of precursor carbonate and direct precipitation as cements and overgrowths. The upper Green River Formation paleo-lake was more expansive with widespread low-oxygen, nutrient-rich, and alkaline saline environments with increased planktic organic-matter productivity. Microbial decay of organic matter in low-oxygen environments produced alkaline lake waters through methanogenesis, possible denitrification, and bacterial sulfate reduction to a limited degree. This favored precipitation of widespread dolomite, as well as Na-carbonates, authigenic feldspars, and analcime from lake water and phreatic pore water. Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) excreted by microbial communities provided favorable nucleation sites for Mg-carbonate, allowing kinetic barriers of low -temperature dolomite formation to be overcome. Cycling of pH due to turnover of organic matter and associated microbial processes potentially bolstered EPS generation and abiotic environmental conditions favorable to dolomite precipitation. It is likely that metastable precursor carbonate was recrystallized to ordered dolomite, but it is possible that direct precipitation occurred. Fe-dolomite overgrowths precipitated after dolomite where microbial Fe reduction occurred in stagnant, oxygen-depleted, alkaline pore waters.
引用
收藏
页码:213 / 242
页数:30
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