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Whittaker et al. 1998
Whittaker, S.G., Sami, T.T., Kyser, T.K. and James, N.P. (1998). Petrogenesis of 1.9 Ga limestones and dolostones and their record of Paleoproterozoic environments. Precambrian Research 90(3-4): 187-202.
Fibrous calcite cements from limestones of the Paleoproterozoic Pethei Group in northwest Canada have relatively constant delta(13)C values, near 1 parts per thousand, that indicate the C exogenic cycle of ca 1.9 Ga ago had similar balances between oxidized and reduced reservoirs of carbon as has existed throughout most of the Phanerozoic. Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios of these cements are near 0.7051, and support a progressively increasing influx of radiogenic Sr from continental weathering into the Paleoproterozoic oceans. delta(18)O values of the cements vary from -14 to -8.5 parts per thousand, although the original values of the cements were probably higher because the cements have been subsequently altered, as evidenced by their variable trace element contents. Proposed higher temperatures or substantially lower delta(18)O values of ancient seawater based on such values may be in error. Fabric retentive dolomites, generally regarded as syndepositional, also have variable delta(18)O values, the highest of which are ca 30 greater than the highest values of the fibrous calcite cements. The dolomites have more radiogenic Sr isotopic compositions indicating that they formed from fluids that interacted with rocks such as those of the elastic sediments which underlie the limestones. These fluids may have partially altered the delta(18)O values and chemical compositions of the fibrous calcite cements. Late-stage calcitic and dolomitic cements that formed from late diagenetic fluids have similar delta(18)O values and radiogenic Sr isotopic ratios as the fabric retentive dolomites. If these potentially syndepositional dolomites have had their primary isotopic compositions reset through interaction with diagenetic fluids, this would have significant implications to other studies using early dolomite to constrain ancient environmental conditions. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.
BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Table 1
Table 2A
Table 2B

Materials & Methods

Keywords
paleoproterozoic, great slave lake, calcite cements, geochemistry, stable isotopes, oxygen isotope geochemistry, proterozoic foreland basin, great-slave-lake, precambrian carbonates, northwest canada, pethei group, wopmay orogen, seawater, dolomitization, platform
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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