Carbonate Rock
Carbonate Rock
Carbonate Rock
An Overview of Carbonates
Professor Chris Kendall
EWS 304
[email protected]
777.2410
Lecture Outline
& commoner in
Modern
Cave Travertine and Spring Tufa both Ancient
& Modern
Lakes Ancient to Modern
Limestones Chemical or
Bochemical
Carbonate Mineralogy
Aragonite high temperature mineral
Calcite stable in sea water & near surface crust
TROPICS
TEMPERATE OCEANS
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Carbonate Particles
Subdivided into micrite (lime mud) & sand-sized
grains
These grains are separated on basis of shape &
internal structure
They are subdivided into: skeletal & non-skeletal
(bio-physico-chemical grains)
Lime
Mud
or
Micrite
WHITING
LIME MUD
ACCUMULATES
ON BANK, OFF BANK
& TIDAL FLATS
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Lime Mud
Ordovician
Kentucky
Ooids
Aragonitic Ooids
Aragonitic Ooids
Calcitic &
Aragonitic
Ooids
Great
Salt
Lake
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Grapestones
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Grapestones
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Pellets
Pellets
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
After Scholle
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Aragonite tests
Corals, stromatoporoids, most molluscs, green algae, & blue-green
algae.
Opaline silica
sponge spicules & radiolarians
Foraminifera
Foraminifera
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
After Scholle
Brachiopod
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Brachiopods
Br
ac
hio
po
d
Bryozoan
Bryozoan
Trilobite Remains
Ostracod Remains
Calcispheres
Tril
obi
te C
ara
pic
e
Crinoid
l
a
i
x
a
t
n
Sy ment
ce
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Equator
Western continental margins
Southern Ocean around Antarctica
4,000 m in Atlantic.
500 - 1,500 m in Pacific
skeletal fabric
Echinoid single crystals
Brachiopod multiple crystals
Blocky equant - final void fill
Meniscus Cement
Evaporation
of mixed
Waters
Influx of
sea water
1. Aragonite
2. Gypsum
3. Anhydrite
4. Dolomite
5. Halite
accumulate
in this order
GEOL 325 Lecture 4: Carbonates
Influx of
Magnesium
Rich
Continental
Ground
Waters
Stylolite
s
Two-dimensional cross-sectonal views of
Dissolution seam(A),
Stylolite (B),
Highly serrate stylolite (C)
Deformed stylolite (D).
(after Bruce
Stylolite
Intergranular
contacts as seen in
s
thin section
Tangential (A)
flattened (B)
concavo-convex (C)
sutured (D)
Stylolites
Stylolites
After Bruce
Railsback
Lecture Conclusions
Increasing pressure elevates concentrations of HCO3-1 & CO32 (products of solubility reaction) in sea water
CaCO3 is more soluble at higher pressures