| Literature DB >> 30177563 |
Henrik H Svensen1, Sergei Frolov2, Grigorii G Akhmanov2, Alexander G Polozov3,4, Dougal A Jerram3,5, Olga V Shiganova6, Nikolay V Melnikov6, Karthik Iyer7,8, Sverre Planke3,9.
Abstract
On its way to the surface, the Siberian Traps magma created a complex sub-volcanic plumbing system. This resulted in a large-scale sill emplacement within the Tunguska Basin and subsequent release of sediment-derived volatiles during contact metamorphism. The distribution of sills and the released sediment-stored gas volume is, however, poorly constrained. In this paper, results from a study of nearly 300 deep boreholes intersecting sills are presented. The results show that sills with thicknesses above 100 m are abundant throughout the upper part of the sedimentary succession. A high proportion of the sills was emplaced within the Cambrian evaporites with average thicknesses in the 115-130 m range and a maximum thickness of 428 m. Thermal modelling of the cooling of the sills shows that the contact metamorphic aureoles are capable of generating 52-80 tonnes of CO2 m-2 with contributions from both marine and terrestrial carbon. When up-scaling these borehole results, an area of 12-19 000 km2 is required to generate 1000 Gt CO2 This represents only 0.7-1.2% of the total area in the Tunguska Basin affected by sills, emphasizing the importance of metamorphic gas generation in the Siberian Traps. These results strengthen the hypothesis of a sub-volcanic trigger and driver for the environmental perturbations during the End-Permian crisis.This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Hyperthermals: rapid and extreme global warming in our geological past'.Entities:
Keywords: End-Permian; Siberian traps; large igneous provinces
Year: 2018 PMID: 30177563 PMCID: PMC6127383 DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2017.0080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ISSN: 1364-503X Impact factor: 4.226