4.7 Article

Magnesium isotopic compositions of the Mesoproterozoic dolostones: Implications for Mg isotopic systematics of marine carbonates

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 164, Issue -, Pages 333-351

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2015.05.002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [41272017, 41322021]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2014M55006]

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Available Mg isotope data indicate that dolostones of different ages have overlapping range of Mg isotopic composition (delta Mg-26) and there is no systematic difference among different types of dolomites. To further explore the Mg isotopic systematics of dolomite formation, we measured Mg isotopic compositions of Mesoproterozoic dolostones from the Wumishan Formation in North China Block, because dolomite formation in Mesoproterozoic might have been fundamentally different from the younger counterparts. Based on petrographic observations, three texturally-different dolomite phases (dolomicrite, subhedral dolomite and anhedral dolomite) are recognized in the Wumishan dolostones. Nevertheless, these three types of dolomites have similar delta Mg-26 values, ranging from -1.35 parts per thousand to -1.72 parts per thousand, which are indistinguishable from Neoproterozoic and Phanerozoic dolostones. To explain delta Mg-26 values of dolostones, we simulate the Mg isotopic system during dolomite formation by applying the one-dimensional Diffusion-Advection-Reaction (1D-DAR) model, assuming that the contemporaneous seawater is the Mg source of dolostone. The 1D-DAR modeling results indicate that the degree of dolomitization is controlled by sedimentation rate, seawater Mg concentration, temperature, and reaction rate of dolomite formation, whereas Mg isotopic composition of dolostone is not only dependent on these factors, but also affected by delta Mg-26 of seawater and isotope fractionation during dolomite formation. Moreover, the 1D-DAR model predicts that dolomite formation within sediments has limited range of variation in delta Mg-26 with respect to limestones. Furthermore, the modeling results demonstrate that dolostone is always isotopically heavier than Ca-carbonate precipitated from seawater, explaining the systematic isotopic difference between dolostones and limestones. Finally, we can infer from the 1D-DAR model that early-formed dolostone at shallower depth of sediments is always isotopically lighter than that formed in deeper sediments, suggesting the potential application of Mg isotope as a proxy for constraining dolostone formation. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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