Dolomite Perspectives on a Perplexing Mineral
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03 dolomite perspectives on a perplexing mineral
Journal of Sedimentary Research 43, no. 4
(December 1973): 965–984. > Hydrothermal dolomitization. Fluids from deep within a basin can rapidly move up fault planes to dolomitize carbonates at shallower depths. MattV_ORAUT09_Fig_10 Dolomite Limestone Flu ids flo w up fa ult p la ne 30. For more on this type of dolomite: Folk RL and Siedlecka A: “The “Schizohaline” Environment: Its Sedimentary and Diagenetic Fabrics as Exemplified by Late Paleozoic Rocks of Bear Island, Svalbard,” Sedimentary Geology 11, no. 1 (May 1974): 1–15. 31. Kohout FA: “Ground-Water Flow and the Geothermal Regime of the Floridian Plateau,” Transactions, Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies 17 (1967): 339–354. 32. von der Borch CC and Lock D: “Geological Significance of Coorong Dolomites,” Sedimentology 26, no. 6 (December 1979): 813–824. 33. Allan and Wiggins, reference 19. 34. Warren, reference 2. 35. Warren, reference 2. 36. Allan and Wiggins, reference 19. 37. Allan and Wiggins, reference 19. 26678schD5R1.indd 8 11/5/09 3:53 PM 40 Oilfield Review A prime example of an ancient fault-related dolomite is found in the Ordovician Trenton– Black River limestones of Michigan, USA, and southwestern Ontario, Canada. 38 There, dolomite defines zones of faulting and fracturing within the surrounding limestone. Microbial Mediation Model—Present-day low-temperature dolomite most often forms in restricted-marine or hypersaline coastal environ- ments; however, these modern settings produce only a small fraction of the total dolomite found in the rock record. Although dolomite is abun- dant in rocks of the Paleozoic era (250 to 540 Ma), it becomes increasingly scarce in younger rock or sediment—particularly in recent (Holocene) settings. By contrast, ancient massive dolomites are believed to have formed in a wide variety of settings, described previously. This disparity leads some researchers to question whether present- day conditions actually reflect those that allowed the formation of massive ancient dolomites. To understand the rarity of dolomite in the recent rock record, researchers sought to dis- cover how dolomite forms. Until recently, they have struggled to synthesize the mineral in their laboratories. Reasoning that seawater contained the right ingredients needed for the creation of dolomite, geochemists used brine concentrations and pressure-temperature conditions thought to exist in nature during the formation of dolomite. 39 The inability to produce dolomite in the labora- tory goes to the very heart of the problem that has plagued geoscientists for years (see “The Dolomite Problem,” page 1). Although magne- sium, calcium and carbonate ions are common in seawater, the conditions necessary to arrange them in the neatly ordered, alternating layers that formed stoichiometric dolomite have appar- ently changed. Once geoscientists understand how dolomite forms in a controlled environment, they may come closer to learning how it forms in nature and why it was once so prevalent and yet is so uncommon today. The dolomite problem is tied to a number of interrelated processes involving thermodynam- ics, chemical kinetics, hydrology, host-rock texture and mineralogy. Discoveries in the 1990s revealed that another process—microbial action—should be factored into the equation (above right) . Microbes became the focus of attention in the sulfate-rich sludges of shallow isolated lagoons, when it was discovered that calcium-rich dolomite precipitates under anoxic, hypersaline conditions. Sulfate-reducing bacteria in the Brazilian Lagoa Vermelha play an important role in the for- mation of primary dolomite in lagoons along the coast east of Rio de Janeiro. 40 There, lagoonal hydrological cycles vary with alternating wet and dry seasons. During the wet season, precipitation and continental groundwater raise water levels; during the dry season, seawater recharges the lagoon, which becomes increasingly saline as evaporation intensifies. This dynamic system helps supply the ions needed for dolomite pre- cipitation and anaerobic microbial activity. Dolomite precipitation requires Mg 2+ , Ca 2+ and CO 3 2– ions, whereas a continuous supply of SO 4 2– ions provides oxygen required to sustain the metabolic activity of the sulfate-reducing bacte- ria. The most favorable time for dolomite precipi- tation is the dry season, when the main source of groundwater recharge is seawater, which delivers the ions necessary for both dolomite precipita- tion and sulfate reduction. In some geochemical models, sulfate is thought to inhibit dolomite production. Experiments have shown that in a purely inorganic system without benefit of bacterial action, the sulfate does indeed inhibit dolomite precipitation. However, this is just the opposite of the Lagoa Vermelha case, in which sulfate is necessary to maintain the microbial activity required to produce dolomite. The hydro- logic system furnishes sulfate ions to the zone of active sulfate reduction where sediments become enriched with dolomite, which, once nucleated, continue to grow with burial. The right strain of bacteria is also a key to dolomite precipitation, as evidenced by the fact that dolomite is not pre- cipitating in most other anoxic, organic-carbon- rich marine sediments. Laboratory experiments were able to simulate the chemistry of the dry-season anoxic hypersaline lagoonal waters. Bacteria taken from the lagoonal sludge were used to inoculate a cultural medium. They were incubated for one year in a refrigerator at 4°C [39°F]. After incubation, a dolomite pre- cipitate was recovered. Scanning electron micro- scope (SEM) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis showed that a ferroan dolomite with a fairly high degree of cation order had been precipitated. Subsequent laboratory experiments using two aerobic bacteria cultures, Halomonas meridiana and Virgibacillus marismortui, were shown to precipitate dolomite in just 30 days at 25°C and 35°C [77°F and 95°F], respectively. 41 These experi- ments also showed that the time required for ini- tiation and precipitation of dolomite decreased with increasing temperature, while the quantity of crystals increased with greater incubation time. Here, bacterial metabolic activity involves produc- tion of ammonia [NH 3 ], which creates an alkaline microenvironment around the bacteria cells. The bacteria also produce CO 2 , which dissolves and transforms into either HCO – 3 or CO –2 3 at higher pH. In the presence of Ca 2+ and Mg 2+ , the culture medium becomes supersaturated with respect to dolomite. These physiochemical changes influ- ence the geochemical environment and promote > Scanning electron microscope photomicrograph of rod-shaped microbial cells inhabiting the surface of a basalt sample. These microbes have precipitated dolomite after three months in anaerobic groundwater. Differences in crystal encrustation may be due to microbial residence time on the basalt surface or may simply reflect differences in metabolic activity. Each cell is approximately 1 µm long. (From Roberts et al, reference 43.) MattV_ORAUT09_Fig_11 0.5 µm 26678schD5R1.indd 40 12/9/09 7:29 AM Autumn 2009 41 dolomite precipitation. Other related experiments are helping researchers develop oxygen isotope paleothermometers to evaluate conditions of ancient dolomite formation. 42 These analyses proved that microbial media- tion of dolomite production can be achieved under low-temperature anoxic conditions, and in a relatively short time. When dolomite is associ- ated with sediments that are rich in organic carbon, biological influences should therefore be investigated. A different type of biomineralization was reported in 2004 when methanogens, rather than sulfate reducers, were found to be responsible for dolomite nucleation and precipitation. Rather than examining a hypersaline lagoon, groundwa- ter researchers conducted a long-term evaluation of a petroleum-contaminated freshwater aquifer in Minnesota, USA. There they discovered dolo- mite on the cells of methanogenic microbes that colonized a subsurface basalt layer in a highly reducing environment. 43 In this setting, dolomite formation is seen as Download 2.33 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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