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Palaeoproterozoic, rift-related, 13C-rich, lacustrine carbonates, NW Russia. Part I: Sedimentology and major element geochemistry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 July 2007
Abstract
The 150-m-thick Kuetsjärvi Sedimentary Formation (KSF) from the Pechenga Greenstone Belt, NW Russia, is one of the key formations in the study of a positive δ13Ccarb excursion occurring globally in the Palaeoproterozoic. The KSF formed in an intracratonic rift setting and is sandwiched between two, 2-km-thick subaerially erupted volcanic units. The KSF was previously interpreted as shallow marine, but new data reported here indicate that it is a non-marine unit deposited on a deeply subaerially weathered surface mantling the underlying volcanic rocks. The lowermost part of the KSF represents an alluvial–fluvial plain, followed by a laterally and vertically variable succession of variegated to mottled fine-grained siliciclastic rocks and ‘red beds‘, dolostones containing stromatolite sheets, hydrothermal travertine deposits and abundant desiccation features (e.g.tepees, surfical silicified crusts and dissolution cavities), including probable pseudomorphed evaporites. Measured S and Corg concentrations for the carbonate and siliciclastic rocks are low. Combined, these features indicate that the carbonate rocks of the KSF accumulated in a shallow lacustrine setting. Major types of carbonate facies were formed by: (1) biologically-induced precipitation; (2) evaporitic removal of CO2 in a closed lake environment; and (3) chemical precipitation from thermal springs. Apparently, none of these carbonate facies was in full isotopic equilibrium with atmospheric CO2. This interpretation shows the importance of taking into account the interplay between global and local depositional factors when interpreting the isotopic signature of the KSF dolostones and its implication for the Palaeoproterozoic carbon isotope excursion
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- Research Article
- Information
- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 95 , Issue 3-4 , September 2004 , pp. 393 - 421
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 2004
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