Nucleation and stabilization of Eocene dolomite in evaporative lacustrine deposits from central Tibetan plateau
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sánchez-Román, MónicaEditorial
International Association of Sedimentologists
Fecha
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Sedimentology (2020) 67, 3333–3354 doi: 10.1111/sed.12744
Resumen
In past decades, the formation of dolomite at low temperature has been
widely studied in both natural systems and cultured experiments, yet the
mechanism(s) involved in the nucleation and precipitation of dolomite
remains unresolved. Late Eocene dolomitic deposits from core in the upper
Niubao Formation (Lunpola Basin, central Tibetan Plateau, China) are
selected as a case study to understand the dolomitization process(es) in the
geological record. Dolomite formation in Lunpola Basin can be ascribed to a
different mechanism forming the large quantities of replacive dolostones in
the geological record; and provides a potential fossil analogue for primary
dolomite precipitation at low temperature. This analogue consists of an alternation of laminated dolomitic beds, organic-rich and siliciclastic layers;
formed in response to intense evaporation interpreted to take place in a continental shallow lake environment. Mineralogical, textural and stable isotopic evaluations suggest that the dolomite from those dense-clotted
laminated beds is a primary precipitate. At the nanoscale, these dolomitic
beds are composed of Ca–Mg carbonate globular nanocrystals (diameter 80 to
100 nm) embedded in an organic matrix and attached to clay flakes. Microinfrared spectroscopy analyses have revealed the presence of aliphatic compounds in the organic matrix. Microscopic and elemental compositional
studies suggest that clay surfaces may facilitate the nucleation of dolomite at
low temperature in the same way as the organic matrix does. The dolomite
laminae show values for d18OVPDB from 3.2 to 1.76& and for d13CVPDB
from 2.62 to 3.78&. Inferred d18OSMOW values of the lake water reveal
typical evaporitic hydrological conditions. These findings provide a potential
link to primary dolomite formation in ancient and modern sedimentary environments; and shed new light on the palaeoenvironmental conditions in central Tibet during the Eocene.





