Oxygen isotopic data for plutonic rocks and gneisses of the Glacier Peak Wilderness and vicinity, northern Cascades, Washington

1988 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.D. White ◽  
C.A. Maley ◽  
Ivan Barnes ◽  
A. B. Ford
1998 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 556-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
P J Patchett ◽  
G E Gehrels ◽  
C E Isachsen

Nd isotopic data are presented for a suite of metamorphic and plutonic rocks from a traverse across the Coast Mountains between Terrace and Prince Rupert, British Columbia, and for three contrasting batholiths in the Omineca Belt of southern Yukon. A presumed metamorphic equivalent of Jurassic volcanic rocks of the Stikine terrane gives epsilon Nd = +6, and a number of other metaigneous and metasedimentary rocks in the core of the Coast Mountains give epsilon Nd values from +3 to +7. A single metasedimentary rock approximately 3 km east of the Work Channel shear zone gives a epsilon Nd value of -9. Coast Belt plutons in the traverse yield epsilon Nd from -1 to +2. The Omineca Belt plutons give epsilon Nd from -10 to -17. All results are consistent with published data in demonstrating that (i) juvenile origins for both igneous and metamorphic rocks are common in the Coast Belt; (ii) representatives of a continental-margin sedimentary sequence with Precambrian crustal Nd are tectonically interleaved in the Coast Mountains; (iii) Coast Mountains plutons can be interpreted as derived from a blend of metamorphic rocks like those seen at the surface, or as arc-type melts contaminated with the older crustal component; and (iv) Omineca Belt plutons are dominated by remelted Precambrian crustal rocks.


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):  
Cole T Edwards ◽  
et al.

Table S1: Stable oxygen isotopic data of each conodont measured using SIMS; Table S2: Stable oxygen isotopic data using SIMS of the Durango apatite standard and a modern shark tooth; Figure S1: Cross plot of d18Omean values and OH/16O from the Shingle Pass (blue), Antelope Range (green), and Cincinnati Arch (white) sections.


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.


1993 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Azzaro ◽  
A. Bellanca ◽  
R. Neri

AbstractUpper Triassic/Lower Jurassic organic-rich shales and interbedded carbonates (Rhaetian → Sinemurian) are widespread in the subsurface of southeastern Sicily where important oil fields have been found hosted in Triassic reservoirs. Core samples from wells drilled offshore and onshore were studied from petrographie and geochemical viewpoints.In the Hettangian/Sinemurian shale-carbonate sequences, which accumulated in a rapidly subsiding basin, the micritic aragonitic mud is still largely preserved. Mixed-layer I/S has remained randomly interstratified to a depth > 4000 m. Diagenetic carbonates are non-stoichiometric finely crystalline, pore-filling dolomite and/or calcite. The carbonate component exhibits a high Sr content and fair amounts of Fe and Mn. Carbon and oxygen isotopic values suggest a subsurface interstitial formation for the digenetic carbonates in an essentially closed system. Based on all accumulated data it is suggested that anoxic marine waters were retained in the sediment pores for a long time after deposition, thus enhancing the preservation of significant amounts of the original organic matter.In contrast, Rhaetian tidal-flat deposits hosting black shales display a clay component characterized by ordered illite-rich I/S and a carbonate mineralogy dominated by low-Mg calcite in the uppermost beds and by near-stoichiometric dolomite in the lowermost ones. Petrographie, chemical and isotopic data indicate early cementation in an oxidizing phreatic environment and lower down in the sequence pervasive dolomitization in a sabkha-type environment.


1994 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 268 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.S. Andrew ◽  
P.J. Hamilton ◽  
R. Mawson ◽  
J.A. Talent ◽  
D.J. Whitford

At least nine and possibly as many as twelve extinction events of global or near-global extent can be discriminated in the mid-Palaeozoic (earliest Silurian to Early Carboniferous), on the basis of brachiopod, coral, conodont and ammonoid data, and the history of carbonate build-ups. From a review of new and available carbon and oxygen isotopic data from whole-rocks and brachiopods from Australian carbonate sequences precisely constrained by conodont data, distinct isotopic responses to these extinction events may be discerned. There is a good correlation between extinction events and isotopic anomalies with the sense of isotopic shift different for different events. In the Silurian sections there are relatively constant 13C values with sharp and sustained enrichments in 13C at recognized extinction events. The 13C values for the Silurian sections are generally enriched in 13C compared with other low-mid Palaeozoic data. In the Devonian sections, the extinction events correlate with a short-lived depletion in 13C values. The different isotopic responses to periods of marked reduction of biomass and biodiversity in the Silurian and the Devonian implies fundamentally different causes and/or responses to the environmental factors leading to the events. The isotope data across recognized extinction events in the mid-Palaeozoic point to their use in inter-and intra-basin correlation.


Radiocarbon ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 43 (2B) ◽  
pp. 647-658 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksander Kacanski ◽  
Israel Carmi ◽  
Aldo Shemesh ◽  
Joel Kronfeld ◽  
Ruth Yam ◽  
...  

A detailed profile of the stable isotopes of carbon and oxygen was obtained from a speleothem (stalagmite) from the Ceremosjna Cave in eastern Serbia. The stalagmite is a low magnesian calcite that did not show any evidence of diagenetic alteration. It was precipitated under isotopic equilibrium conditions from dripping water. The age and rate of deposition was derived from six internally consistent radiocarbon dates. The initial 14C activity was determined to be approximately 80 pMC. The stalagmite appears to preserve a continuous record of calcite deposition from approximately 2300 BP until the present.Oxygen isotopic data, based upon 100 samples, are used to derive the first paleotemperature record for Serbia. A regression analysis of the all the data indicates that over the period of time that the speleothem was deposited there was a general trend of lowering of the average temperature. Superimposed upon this are significant long-term temperature fluctuations. These can be divided into four broader climatic groupings. Going from the oldest times to the present, there are two warm periods separated by a period when the temperatures fell below the temperature trend line. However, the absolute temperatures were generally above those of the more recent period that is generally characterized by the coolest climatic conditions.


Geofluids ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Kaixun Zhang ◽  
Xinxin Fang ◽  
Ying Xie ◽  
Shun Guo ◽  
Zhenwang Liu ◽  
...  

Diagenesis is one of the most predominant factors controlling reservoir quality in the deeply buried siliciclastic sandstones of the third member in the Eocene Shahejie Formation (Es3), in the Raoyang Sag, the Bohai Bay Basin. In this study, thin section, cathodoluminescence (CL), scanning electron microscope (SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), Raman spectrum, carbon and oxygen isotopes, and fluid inclusion analyses are used to restructure paragenetic sequences and detect origins of carbonate cements recorded in this deeply buried member. Based on petrographic analyses, the Es3 sandstones are identified as lithic arkoses and feldspathic litharenites at present, but derived from original arkoses and lithic arkoses, respectively. Geohistorically, the Es3 sandstones have undergone two diagenetic episodes of eogenesis and mesogenesis. Events observed during eogenesis include chemical compaction, leaching of feldspar, development of chlorite coating and kaolinite, precipitation of the first generation of quartz overgrowth (QogI), dissolution of feldspar, and precipitation of calcite and nonferroan dolomite cement. Mesogenetic alterations include chemical compaction, precipitation of kaolinite aggregate and the second generation of quartz overgrowth (QogII), precipitation of ankerite, development of I/S and illite, and formation of pyrite. Carbon and oxygen isotopic data show that calcite cements are characterized by 13C ( δ 13 C PDB ranging from -0.7‰ to 1.0‰ with an average of 0.1‰) and 18O ( δ 18 O SMOW varying from 12.3‰ to 19.0‰ with an average of 16.2‰); these stable isotopic data combined with Z value (from 114.69 to 122.18) indicate skeletal debris ( δ 13 C PDB ranging from -1.2‰ to -1.1‰ with an average of -1.15‰; δ 18 O SMOW varying from 23.0‰ to 23.2‰ with an average of 23.1‰) and ooids in adjacent carbonate beds involved in meteoric water and seawater from outside jointly served as the carbon sources. For nonferroan dolomite, the δ 13 C PDB value of -4.1‰ is a little bit negative than the calcite, and the δ 18 O SMOW of 14.3‰ is coincident with the calcite, which suggest the nonferroan dolomites come from the diagenetic fluids with a similar oxygen isotopic composition to that of the calcite but modified by the external acidic δ 13C-depleted water. However, the ankerites are actually rich in 12C ( δ 13 C PDB ranging from -10.0‰ to -1.2‰, mean = − 4.3 ‰ ) and 16O ( δ 18 O SMOW varying from 10.1‰ to 19.4‰, mean = 14.9 ‰ ), when combined with the distribution of cutting down along the direction pointing to sand-body center from the margin and microthermometric temperature (Th’s) data mainly varying between 115.2°C and 135.5°C with an average of 96.0°C, indicating the main origination from the Es3 source rocks with effective feldspar buffer action for the acidic fluids in the margins of the Es3 sandstones. In addition, the necessary elements for ankerite such as Fe2+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ ions also come from organic matter and clay minerals during thermal maturation of the Es3 source rocks. The study provides insights into diagenetic processes and origination of carbonate cements in the Es3 sandstones; it will facilitate the cognition of predictive models of deeply buried sandstone reservoirs to some extent, which can reduce the risks involved in oil and gas exploration and development.


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