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Pedogenic-phreatic carbonates on a Middle Devonian (Givetian) terrigenous alluvial-deltaic plain, Gilwood Member (Watt Mountain Formation), northcentral Alberta, Canada.

Authors :
WILLIAMS
KRAUSE
Source :
Sedimentology; Dec98, Vol. 45 Issue 6, 4 Diagrams, 6 Charts, 11 Graphs
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

In the Muskeg Trough of northcentral Alberta the Gilwood Member contains widespread carbonate deposits that formed within terrigenous mudstone and sandstone hosts. Stratigraphic, depositional and petrographic relationships indicate that these carbonates represent calcretes and dolocretes. Calcretes, observed best with cathodoluminescence, display microcrystalline alpha fabrics, circumgranular cracks, root networks, displacive growth fabrics, elongate channel voids and rare coloform growths with flower spar. Similarly, dolocretes have microcrystalline alpha fabrics, brecciation, gradational contacts with host mudstones, extensive layered nodular horizons and are associated with anhydrite and pyrite. δ[sup 13]C values range between -7‰ to +1‰ and –6‰ to +3‰ for calcretes and dolocretes, respectively. Oxygen isotopes are more variable and differ with host lithologies. δ[sup 18]O of calcretes ranges between -11‰ to -8‰ for sandstones and -8‰ to -3‰ for mudstones, whereas δ[sup 18]O of dolocretes ranges between -3‰ to 1‰ for marine mudstones and -6‰ to -2‰ for pedogenic mudstones. Regional mapping indicates that calcretes thicken towards the deepest parts of the Muskeg Trough. Widespread dolocretes extend beyond the eastern and western limits of Muskeg Trough and are useful marker intervals for regional correlations. Dolocretes of restricted lateral extent are found within gleyed palaeosol mudstones next to calcretized channel sandstones. Calcrete isotopic values are interpreted as indicative of carbonate precipitation from waters with meteoric water input. However, the higher δ[sup 18]O values in dolocretes are indicative of a contribution from an isotopically heavier source such as seawater. Stratigraphically, calcretes are most common along the western and northern edges of Muskeg Trough; thus, calcrete accumulation was further controlled by meteori... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
CARBONATES
ALLUVIUM

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00370746
Volume :
45
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Sedimentology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
5089355