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Santos et al. 2000
Santos, R.V., de Alvarenga, C.J.S., Dardenne, M.A., Sial, A.N. and Ferreira, V.P. (2000). Carbon and oxygen isotope profiles across Meso-Neoproterozoic limestones from central Brazil: Bambui and Paranoa groups. Precambrian Research 104(3-4): 107-122.
We present carbon and oxygen isotopic data on carbonates along three profiles of the Neoproterozoic Bambui group in central Brazil. This unit covers an area of more than 300 000 km(2) and comprises carbonate-silicliclastic sediments at the base that grade into siliciclastic sediments towards the top. The Bambui group overlies by unconformity the Paranoa group, which consists mostly of siltstone, quartzite and minor limestone. The data presented here improve the stratigraphic correlation within the Bambui basin and show that it evolved in an environment significantly different from that of the Paranoa basin. Our data show large fluctuations of delta C-13(PDB) in limestones from the Bambui Group (from + 0.8 to + 13.5 parts per thousand) in all the three studied areas. Some of these fluctuations represent stratigraphic markers that can be used as a chronostratigraphic tool within a basin scale. This observation is relevant considering the lack of fossil record and other stratigraphic markers in Neoproterozoic sequences. We also present the first isotopic profiles along the Paranoa-Bambui transition, which shows that the delta C-13(PDB) values grade from + 1.0 parts per thousand in the Paranoa group, to + 2.6 parts per thousand in the lower portion of the Bambui group, increasing up to + 12 parts per thousand in the upper part of this unit. Based on our carbon isotope data, as well as other geological, mineralogical and Nd isotope studies, we argue that the sediments of the Paranoa group were deposited on an open platform that was fully connected to the ocean. On the other hand, the sediments of the Bambui group were deposited in an epicontinental sea and during a tectonic inversion in a foreland basin at about 790-600 Ma. This unit displays an increased amount of elastic sediments upwards. We argue that the high carbon isotope values observed in limestones and marlstones from the Bambui group are correlated to worldwide high carbon isotope values reported for the Neoproterozoic. However, we also point out that novel marine conditions induced by the tectonic inversion of the basin may also have contributed to increase the carbon isotopic composition of the Bambui carbonates. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

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Table 1B
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Sampling & Methods

Keywords
neoproterozoic, carbon isotopes, oxygen isotopes, brazil, bambui group, paranoa group, upper proterozoic successions, irece basin, stratigraphy, geochemistry, sedimentology, metamorphism, diagenesis, platform, seawater, namibia
Journal
Precambrian Research
http://www.elsevier.com/wps/product/cws_home/503357
Publisher
Elsevier Science
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The Netherlands
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