Clumped isotope thermometry reveals diagenetic origin of the dolomite layer within late Ordovician black shale of the Guanyinqiao Bed (SW China)

2021 ◽  
pp. 120641
Author(s):  
Xiaolong Hu ◽  
Inigo A. Müller ◽  
Ankun Zhao ◽  
Martin Ziegler ◽  
Qing Chen ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xunyun He ◽  
Anjiang Shen ◽  
Shaoyun Xiong ◽  
Yuanyuan Hu ◽  
Jingwu Wu

1977 ◽  
Vol 82 ◽  
pp. 1-48
Author(s):  
R.L Christie ◽  
J.S Peel

A sequence of Lower Palaeozoic carbonate and clastic rocks is described from Børglum Elv, Peary Land, eastem North Greenland, and briefly compared to Lower Palaeozoic sections elsewhere in Greenland and in Spitsbergen. Lower Cambrian clastic rocks of the Buen Formation are followed by dolomite of the Lower Cambrian Brønlund Fjord Formation (125 m). Succeeding dolomite and dolomitic limestone of the Wandel Valley Formation (320 m) of Early to Middle Ordovician age are overlain by limestone of the Børglum River Formation (430 m) of Middle to Late Ordovician age. Un-narned Early Silurian dolomite and limestone formations (150 m and 320 m respectively) are followed by an un.narned Middle Silurian black shale formation (c. 100 m) and at least 800 m of a late Middle Silurian and younger un-named flysch formation. Carbonate mounds, originating in the highest beds of the un-named Silurian limestone formation, occupy stratigraphic levels through the overlying black shale formation and into the flysch formation.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 581-600 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Henry Williams

The Point Leamington Formation, as redefined herein, comprises a thick sequence of siliciclastic turbidites containing occasional Upper Ordovician graptolites and lies with the Exploits Subzone of the Dunnage Zone in central Newfoundland. The base of the unit is marked by the first coarse- to medium-grained sandstone, at a level that varies from the Dicranograptus clingani Zone to the Pleurograptus linearis Zone. Several intervals of interbedded black shales and siltstones higher in the formation yield assemblages characteristic of the P. linearis, Dicellograptus complanatus and Dicellograptus anceps zones. Debris-flow breccias occur at several levels within the Point Leamington Formation—some contain graptolitic, black shale clasts derived from the underlying Lawrence Harbour Formation—and range in age from Nemagraptus gracilis Zone to D. clingani Zone. Both the graptolite assemblages and lithostratigraphic succession of the Point Leamington Formation are similar to those of coeval rocks in southern Scotland, confirming a strong relationship between the two areas during the Late Ordovician.


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