4.6 Article

Neoproterozoic marine carbonates and their paleoceanographic significance

Journal

GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
Volume 160, Issue -, Pages 28-45

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2017.11.006

Keywords

Carbonate sedimentology; Seawater Mg/Ca; Marine cements; Carbonate mineralogy; Precambrian seawater chemistry; Dolomite

Funding

  1. ARC [DP130102240]
  2. NAI
  3. Elizabeth and Vernon Puzey Fellowship

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The primary mineralogy of marine carbonate precipitates has been a crucial factor in constraining the major element composition of ancient oceans. Secular changes in Phanerozoic marine chemistry, including Mg/Ca, have been well-documented using the original carbonate mineralogy of ooids, marine cements and biominerals. However, the history of Precambrian seawater chemistry is not as well constrained, partially due to the prevalence of dolomitisation in the Precambrian geological record. The Neoproterozoic (similar to 1000 Ma to similar to 541 Ma) record of primary carbonate mineralogy is documented here using a combination of literature data and new analysis of marine carbonate precipitates from the Otavi Fold Belt, Namibia, the Death Valley succession, USA and the Adelaide Fold Belt, Australia. These data suggest that the last similar to 460 million years of the Proterozoic were dominated by aragonite and high-Mg calcite precipitation in shallow marine settings. In contrast, low-Mg calcite has only been recognised in a small number of formations. In addition to aragonite and calcite precipitation, marine dolomite precipitation was widespread in Neoproterozoic oceans, including mimetic (syn-sedimentary) dolomitisation and primary dolomite marine cementation. The combination of marine aragonite, high Mg-calcite and dolomite precipitation during the Neoproterozoic suggests extremely high seawater Mg/Ca conditions relative to Phanerozoic oceans. Marine dolomite precipitation may also be linked to widespread marine anoxia during this time.

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