scholarly journals Supplemental Material: Modern-like elevation and climate in Tibet since the mid-Miocene (ca. 15 Ma)

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Xu ◽  
Shun Li ◽  
et al.

Geochronologic and paired stable isotopic data from the upper Gazhacun Formation of the Namling Basin in southern Tibet.

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Xu ◽  
Shun Li ◽  
et al.

Geochronologic and paired stable isotopic data from the upper Gazhacun Formation of the Namling Basin in southern Tibet.


Geofluids ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ane K. Engvik ◽  
Heinrich Taubald ◽  
Arne Solli ◽  
Tor Grenne ◽  
Håkon Austrheim

New stable isotopic data from mineral separates of albite, scapolite, amphibole, quartz, and calcite of metasomatic rocks (Bamble lithotectonic domain) give increased knowledge on fluid type, source, and evolution during metamorphism. Albite from a variety of albitites givesδ18OSMOWvalues of 5.1–11.1‰, while quartz from clinopyroxene-bearing albitite gives 11.5–11.6‰.δ18OSMOWvalues for calcite samples varies between 3.4 and 12.4‰and shows more consistentδ13C values of −4.6 to-6.0‰. Amphibole from scapolite metagabbro yields aδ18OSMOWvalue of 4.3 to 6.7‰andδDSMOWvalue of −84 to −50‰, while the scapolite givesδ18OSMOWvalues in the range of 7.4 to10.6‰. These results support the interpretation that the original magmatic rocks were metasomatised by seawater solutions with a possible involvement from magmatic fluids. Scapolitisation and albitisation led to contrasting chemical evolution with respect to elements like P, Ti, V, Fe, and halogens. The halogens deposited as Cl-scapolite were dissolved by albitisation fluid and reused as a ligand for metal transport. Many of the metal deposits in the Bamble lithotectonic domain, including Fe-ores, rutile, and apatite deposits formed during metasomatism. Brittle to ductile deformation concurrent with metasomatic infiltration illustrates the dynamics and importance of metasomatic processes during crustal evolution.


1989 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 585-591 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Bruce Railsback ◽  
Thomas F. Anderson ◽  
Spafford C. Ackerly ◽  
John L. Cisne

2013 ◽  
Vol 110 (43) ◽  
pp. E4055-E4055 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Fontes-Villalba ◽  
P. Carrera-Bastos ◽  
L. Cordain

1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 1619-1629 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Koehler ◽  
T. K. Kyser ◽  
R. Enkin ◽  
E. Irving

In the Paleozoic Elk Point Basin, Saskatchewan, Canada, hematite in evaporite rocks of the Middle Devonian Prairie Formation records two magnetizations that are very different from those expected when the evaporites were originally deposited. The first (X magnetization) corresponds to Cretaceous or Cenozoic paleofield directions and contains both normal and reversed polarities. The second (Y magnetization) appears to be a composite of Cretaceous–Cenozoic and late Paleozoic (Kiaman) reversed polarity directions. The X magnetization occurs in anomalous ores and is associated with fine-grained hematite occurring predominantly along grain boundaries. The Y magnetization occurs in normal ore and is associated with sylvite that has hematite both along grain boundaries and within sylvite crystals, the latter inferred to be of Kiaman age. K–Ar ages of the host sylvites are also composite, and are consistent with those inferred from paleomagnetic directions. Stable isotopic compositions of fluid inclusions in halite and the associated hematite in the Prairie Formation indicate that the hematite carrying the X magnetization formed at low temperature (about 60 °C) by fluids similar to those currently resident in overlying formations. The hematite carrying the inferred late Paleozoic magnetization was also formed at low temperatures by fluids having δD and δ18O values significantly lower than Paleozoic seawater. Paleomagnetic, petrographic, and isotopic data, and K–Ar ages indicate that evaporites in the Elk Point Basin have been affected by major fluid events that occurred during the late Paleozoic and Cretaceous–Cenozoic. These fluids are most probably related to brines mat have their origins within the basin, which were mobilized by major tectonic events.


1997 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Sultan ◽  
Neil Sturchio ◽  
Fekri A. Hassan ◽  
Mohamed Abdel Rahman Hamdan ◽  
Abdel Moneim Mahmood ◽  
...  

An Atlantic source of precipitation can be inferred from stable isotopic data (H and O) for fossil groundwaters and uranium-series-dated carbonate spring deposits from oases in the Western Desert of Egypt. In the context of available stable isotopic data for fossil groundwaters throughout North Africa, the observed isotopic depletions (δD −72 to −81‰; δ18O −10.6 to −11.5‰) of fossil (≥32,000 yr B.P.) groundwaters from the Nubian aquifer are best explained by progressive condensation of water vapor from paleowesterly wet oceanic air masses that traveled across North Africa and operated at least as far back as 450,000 yr before the present. The values of δ18O (17.1 to 25.9‰) for 45,000- to >450,000-yr-old tufas and vein-filling calcite deposits from the Kharga and Farafra Oases are consistent with deposition from groundwaters having oxygen isotopic compositions similar to those of fossil groundwaters sampled recently at these locations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria A. Rodriguez-Mustafa ◽  
Adam C. Simon ◽  
Laura D. Bilenker ◽  
Ilya Bindeman ◽  
Ryan Mathur ◽  
...  

Abstract Iron oxide copper-gold (IOCG) deposits are major sources of Cu, contain abundant Fe oxides, and may contain Au, Ag, Co, rare earth elements (REEs), U, and other metals as economically important byproducts in some deposits. They form by hydrothermal processes, but the source of the metals and ore fluid(s) is still debated. We investigated the geochemistry of magnetite from the hydrothermal unit and manto orebodies at the Mina Justa IOCG deposit in Peru to assess the source of the iron oxides and their relationship with the economic Cu mineralization. We identified three types of magnetite: magnetite with inclusions (type I) is only found in the manto, is the richest in trace elements, and crystallized between 459° and 707°C; type Dark (D) has no visible inclusions and formed at around 543°C; and type Bright (B) has no inclusions, has the highest Fe content, and formed at around 443°C. Temperatures were estimated using the Mg content in magnetite. Magnetite samples from Mina Justa yielded an average δ56Fe ± 2σ value of 0.28 ± 0.05‰ (n = 9), an average δ18O ± 2σ value of 2.19 ± 0.45‰ (n = 9), and Δ’17O values that range between –0.075 and –0.047‰. Sulfide separates yielded δ65Cu values that range from –0.32 to –0.09‰. The trace element compositions and textures of magnetite, along with temperature estimations for magnetite crystallization, are consistent with the manto magnetite belonging to an iron oxide-apatite (IOA) style mineralization that was overprinted by a younger, structurally controlled IOCG event that formed the hydrothermal unit orebody. Altogether, the stable isotopic data fingerprint a magmatic-hydrothermal source for the ore fluids carrying the Fe and Cu at Mina Justa and preclude significant input from meteoric water and basinal brines.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 100323
Author(s):  
J. Alyssa White ◽  
Rick J. Schulting ◽  
Peter Hommel ◽  
Vyacheslav Moiseyev ◽  
Valeri Khartanovich ◽  
...  

1991 ◽  
Vol 128 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. Maliva ◽  
J. A. D. Dickson ◽  
A. Råheim

AbstractLaser ablation techniques permit the determination of the stable isotopic ratios of finely crystalline calcite cements in chalks for the first time. Modelling of fluid–rock interaction using whole rock and laser ablation stable isotopic data indicates that carbonate mineral diagenesis in the Eldfisk Field consisted largely of the dissolution and reprecipitation of calcite with little associated loss of porosity. Cementation by calcite derived from stylolites apparently occurred throughout the Eldfisk Field chalk, but had only a subsidiary effect on whole rock isotopic ratios. Oxygen isotopic data indicates a pore water temperature of 50–80 °C during the bulk of chalk recrystallization. Increases in whole rock δ13C values with depth are likely the result of bacterial methanogenesis during chalk recrystallization.


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