z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Taking the heat out of British Jurassic septarian concretions
Author(s) -
Paxton Richmal B.,
Dennis Paul F.,
Marca Alina D.,
Hendry James P.,
Hudson John D.,
Andrews Julian E.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the depositional record
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.604
H-Index - 3
ISSN - 2055-4877
DOI - 10.1002/dep2.139
Subject(s) - concretion , calcite , diagenesis , geology , carbonate , benthic zone , stable isotope ratio , geochemistry , mineralogy , pore water pressure , paleontology , chemistry , oceanography , physics , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Septarian carbonate concretions in marine mudrocks contain calcite cements that should represent evolving conditions from ambient temperature, shallow subsurface environments to warmer, burial diagenetic conditions. Clumped isotope results from British Middle and Upper Jurassic concretions indicate that most concretion body calcites formed at temperatures between 9 ± 5°C and 18 ± 5°C from marine pore waters with δ 18 O values between 0.2 ± 1.1‰ and −2.2 ± 1.1‰ VSMOW . Early diagenetic, brown, fibrous calcite fracture cements mostly formed at temperatures between 15 ± 5°C and 19 ± 5°C, again from marine‐derived pore fluids with δ 18 O compositions between −0.5 ± 1.1‰ and 0.3 ± 1.2‰ VSMOW . Two of these cements showed evolution to warmer temperatures and more evolved pore fluids with growth, indicating transition to deeper burial conditions. Later diagenetic, sparry calcite cements gave more variable temperatures but all indicated involvement of meteoric pore fluids. The highest clumped isotope temperature (43 ± 6°C) is within error of the 50°C regional maximum burial temperature estimate. These results are consistent with published geological and stable isotope constraints on the formation of Jurassic septarian concretions and highlight their potential as robust archives of marine benthic palaeotemperatures. Some of these results differ from clumped isotope data in an earlier study that reported higher temperatures for concretion body and early diagenetic fibrous cement fringes probably due to methodological differences.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here