101 contact twins in gypsum experimentally obtained from calcium carbonate enriched solutions: mineralogical implications for natural gypsum deposits
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Int Union Crystallography
Materia
Gypsum Twins Fluid inclusions Evaporites Swallowtail
Date
2023-06Referencia bibliográfica
Cotellucci, A., Otálora, F., Canals, A., Criado-Reyes, J., Pellegrino, L., Bruno, M., ... & Pastero, L. (2023). 101 contact twins in gypsum experimentally obtained from calcium carbonate enriched solutions: mineralogical implications for natural gypsum deposits. Journal of Applied Crystallography, 56(3).[https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600576723002674]
Sponsorship
PRIN 2017 of the Italian Ministry for Education; University and Research (MIUR) (grant No. 2017L83S77); Ayudas I+D+i en Universidades y Centros de Investigacio´n Pu´ blicos (grant No. P18- FR-5008); Proyectos I+D+i 2020 of the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacio´n (grant No. PID2020-112986GB-I00)Abstract
Gypsum twins are frequently observed in nature, triggered by a wide array of
impurities that are present in their depositional environments and that may
exert a critical role in the selection of different twin laws. Identifying the
impurities able to promote the selection of specific twin laws has relevance for
geological studies aimed at interpreting the gypsum depositional environments
in ancient and modern deposits. Here, the effect of calcium carbonate (CaCO3)
on gypsum (CaSO4 2H2O) growth morphology has been investigated by
performing temperature-controlled laboratory experiments with and without
the addition of carbonate ions. The precipitation of twinned gypsum crystals has
been achieved experimentally (101 contact twin law) by adding carbonate to the
solution, and the involvement of rapidcreekite (Ca2SO4CO3 4H2O) in selecting
the 101 gypsum contact twin law was supported, suggesting an epitaxial
mechanism.Moreover, the occurrence of 101 gypsum contact twins in nature has
been suggested by comparing the natural gypsum twin morphologies observed
in evaporitic environments with those obtained in experiments. Finally, both
orientations of the primary fluid inclusions (of the negative crystal shape) with
respect to the twin plane and the main elongation of sub-crystals that form the
twin are proposed as a fast and useful method (especially in geological samples)
to distinguish between the 100 and 101 twin laws. The results of this study
provide new insights into the mineralogical implications of twinned gypsum
crystals and their potential as a tool to better understand natural gypsum
deposits.