Abstract
Triassic strata of the Yangtze Platform at Guanling contain a dolomitized interior, undolomitized margin, and partially dolomitized slope to basin margin. Dolomitized microbial laminate caps of peritidal cycles and massive dolomite with associated evaporite nodules and solution collapse breccias are consistent with penecontemporaneous tidal flat and evaporative dolomitization in the platform interior. The preferential dolomitization of the slope and basin margin (up to 7 km basinward of the margin), dolomitization along fractures, and selective dolomitization of the matrix in slope breccia that diminishes toward the margin are interpreted to have resulted from the incursion of basin-derived fluids during burial. Integrated analysis of fluid-inclusion microthermometry, oxygen, carbon, and strontium isotopes, trace element geochemistry, U-Pb age dates of carbonate phases, and burial history support the recrystallization of interior dolomite and slope to basin-margin dolomitization by brines at high temperatures during burial. The Yangtze Platform at Guanling provides an excellent example of widespread stratiform dolomitization resulting from the superposition of multiple mechanisms, including penecontemporaneous dolomitization by evaporative seawater brines, high-temperature dolomitization of the slope and basin margin by basinal brines, and high-temperature recrystallization of dolomite by brines during burial. This study provides an example that suggests that widespread stratiform dolomite may result from superposed Earth surface and high-temperature burial dolomitization processes and provides a valuable analog for other carbonate platforms in which the margin remains undolomitized while the interior and basin margin are dolomitized. Similar mechanisms likely contributed to the widespread dolomitization of platforms across the Nanpanjiang and Sichuan basins.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Article number | 324 |
| Journal | Minerals |
| Volume | 15 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Mar 2025 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
- Geology