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Pleistocene aragonite crust diagenesis mimics microbialite fabrics (Danakil Depression, Ethiopia)

Authors :
David Jaramillo-Vogel
Juan Carlos Braga
Haileyesus Alemu Negga
Torsten Vennemann
Eva De Boever
Jean-Charles Schaegis
Valentin Rime
Balemwal Atnafu
Tesfaye Kidane
Anneleen Foubert
Source :
Sedimentary Geology, vol. 446, pp. 106341
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

Fibrous aragonite crusts occur in two consecutive Pleistocene successions in the Danakil Depression (Afar, Ethiopia). Lateral transitions between pristine and altered fibrous aragonite crusts document changes in texture associated with diagenesis. Crusts formed as essentially abiotic seafloor precipitates at the transition frommarine to evaporitic conditions. Diagenesis started with the dissolution of aragonite fans at the interface between single fans in non-laminated crusts and along lamination planes in isopachous, irregular, or crudely laminated crusts. Incomplete dissolution resulted in the development of secondary porosity within amatrix of undissolved aragonite fibers. Subsequently, the porosity was filled with calcite that systematically encased remaining aragonite crystals. This was followed by the dissolution of remnant aragonite fibers, producing a network of elongated inter- and intracrystalline pores that were eventually filled with low-Mg calcite. The stepwise substitution of fibrous aragonite by low-Mg calcite resulted in sparry, sparry-cloudy, sparry-micritic (including clotted micrite), and peloidal textures, which obscure the fibrous nature of the original deposits. Stable C- and O-isotope compositions suggest that early diagenesiswas driven by meteoric and evaporative fluids. These observations unequivocally demonstrate destructive diagenesis, resulting in secondary textures, which mimic micritic and grumous (peloidal and clotted) textures associated with sparry microfabrics. This suggests that these textures, classically interpreted as primarymicrobial precipitates and used as evidence of biogenicity in ancient microbialites, might be diagenetic products in some cases, even though at some stage, microbial processes and/or degradation of organic matter could have been involved in the diagenetic process.<br />Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) 200021_163114<br />SNSF Ambizione 154810

Details

ISSN :
00370738
Volume :
446
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Sedimentary Geology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....74a16b40090ffaf603faad4f618bc459