| Literature DB >> 29340852 |
Abstract
The upper carbonate member of the Kaibab Formation in northern Arizona (USA) was subaerially exposed during the end Permian and contains fractured and zoned chert rubble lag deposits typical of karst topography. The karst chert rubble has secondary (authigenic) silica precipitates suitable for estimating continental weathering temperatures during the end Permian karst event. New oxygen and hydrogen isotope ratios of secondary silica precipitates in the residual rubble breccia: (1) yield continental palaeotemperature estimates between 17 and 22 °C; and, (2) indicate that meteoric water played a role in the crystallization history of the secondary silica. The continental palaeotemperatures presented herein are broadly consistent with a global mean temperature estimate of 18.2 °C for the latest Permian derived from published climate system models. Few data sets are presently available that allow even approximate quantitative estimates of regional continental palaeotemperatures. These data provide a basis for better understanding the end Permian palaeoclimate at a seasonally-tropical latitude along the western shoreline of Pangaea.Entities:
Keywords: Authigenic silica; Breccia; Chert; Chert rubble; End Permian; Grand Canyon; Kaibab Formation; Karst; Oxygen and hydrogen stable isotopes; Permian–Triassic Boundary; Subaerial exposure surface
Year: 2018 PMID: 29340852 PMCID: PMC5770344 DOI: 10.1186/s12932-017-0047-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geochem Trans ISSN: 1467-4866 Impact factor: 4.737
Fig. 1Palaeogeographic map of the Late Permian (255 Ma)
(Used with permission [89])
Fig. 2Secondary silica sample locations in the Marble Canyon area of northern Arizona. Samples were extracted from five Kaibab Formation rubble breccia slot canyon sites
Fig. 3Example of translucent to white secondary silica from the Kaibab Formation chert rubble breccia (Sevenmile Draw). Vugs are typically rimmed with fibrous silica which transition to drusy quartz toward the middle of vugs, interstices or cavities. Mechanical pencil tip (width) is 0.05 mm
Fig. 4Diagrammatic sketch contrasting chert-rich, marine carbonate rock and secondary silica and chert rubble deposits in a continental karst terrain. a Early diagenetic, marine carbonate-draped chert nodule with variable percentage of unreplaced carbonate. b Lag accumulation of resistant, slumped and randomly oriented chert nodules in a continental karst terrain. Unreplaced carbonate is leached out and replaced by secondary, cavity-fill silica which consists of fibrous, botryoidal and drusy quartz
(Diagram modified from [46])
Fig. 5δ18O vs δD diagram showing the isotopic compositions of 15 secondary silica samples extracted from Kaibab Formation rubble breccia lag deposits. The oxygen and hydrogen isotope ratio data of secondary silica separates form domains elongated away from Line A. Line A (actually more of a band) is the inferred locus of isotopic compositions of cherts in equilibrium with modern sea water at various temperatures [45]. Silica data elongated away from Line A indicate that meteoric (fresh) waters were involved in the crystallization history of the silica. Silica data are interpreted in terms of palaeotemperatures by comparing them with temperature lines drawn approximately parallel to the meteoric water line [45]. Palaeotemperature estimates for the secondary silica separates range from ~ 17 to 22 °C. The most 18O- and D-depleted samples are likely those with the purest amount of authigenic silica. These are represented on the diagram by four samples which plot farthest from Line A and closer to the warmest palaeotemperture estimates of ~ 21–22 °C
Description, data and location of fifteen Kaibab Formation secondary (authigenic) silica samples extracted from the end-Permian chert rubble breccia (northern Arizona)
| δ18O SMOW (‰)a | δD SMOW (‰)a | Description and location of secondary silica samples |
|---|---|---|
| 30.8 | − 74.5 | Drusy, vug-fill silica (Marble Canyon; KNB1) |
| 30.6 | − 70.0 | Drusy, vug-fill silica (Soap Creek; SC2) |
| 29.7 | − 87.8 | Translucent, microcystalline silica vug-fill (Badger Canyon; BC1) |
| 30.8 | − 77.6 | Translucent drusy, vug-fill quartz (Marble Canyon; MC22) |
| 29.9 | − 76.1 | White, translucent granular microcrystalline silica (Badger Canyon; KF1) |
| 30.6 | − 73.6 | Translucent granular microcrystalline silica (Marble Canyon; K6) |
| 30.99 | − 78.0 | White, translucent granular microcrystalline silica (Badger Canyon; KF2) |
| 31.01 | − 75.7 | Translucent, dull botryoidal silica (Sevenmile Draw; K7) |
| 28.52 | − 86.2 | Translucent, granular microcrystalline silica (Sevenmile Draw; K5) |
| 31.5 | − 77.0 | White, translucent granular microcrystalline silica (Marble Canyon; NB1) |
| 30.9 | − 68.9 | Translucent, granular microcrystalline silica (Soap Creek Canyon; SC3) |
| 30.46 | − 80.8 | Translucent, dull botryoidal silica (Sevenmile Draw; 744) |
| 28.9 | − 82.0 | White, translucent granular microcrystalline silica (Marble Canyon; NBK) |
| 27.7 | − 92.0 | White, pale blue fibrous silica (Cathedral Wash; NB3) |
| 27.8 | − 87.42 | White, translucent granular microcrystalline silica (Cathedral Wash; NB5) |
aReproducibility for δ18O is ± 0.2‰ and δD is ± 2‰. Reproducibility is based on duplicate runs and standards