Regional studies of dolomites and their included fluids: recognizing multiple chemically distinct fluids during the complex diagenetic history of Lower Carboniferous (Mississippian) rocks of the Irish Zn-Pb ore field |
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Authors: | Aaron W Johnson Kevin L Shelton Jay M Gregg Ian D Somerville Wayne R Wright Zsolt R Nagy |
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Institution: | 1. Northwest Missouri State University, Maryville, MO, USA 2. University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, MO, USA 3. Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA 4. University College, Dublin, Ireland 5. Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA 6. Schlumberger DCS, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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Abstract: | This study provides a regional framework within which studies of ore-related dolomite and dolomite cements may be placed. Fluid inclusion data indicate the presence of three distinct fluids following early dolomitization: 1) a ubiquitous low-temperature, higher salinity fluid found in saddle dolomite; 2) a low-temperature, lower salinity fluid limited to sub-Waulsortian and Waulsortian carbonates; and 3) a higher temperature, lower salinity fluid found in Waulsortian and supra-Waulsortian rocks. Similar fluids have been reported in ore-associated minerals and postmineralization dolomite (Type 1) and in ore-stage carbonates and sphalerite (Types 2 and 3). The halogen geochemistry of included fluids indicates genesis from evaporated seawater. Type 1 fluids are enriched in chloride relative to bromide, reflecting a component of salinity derived via dissolution of halite or from dehydration of seawater. These data suggest that dolomitization and mineralization of Mississippian rocks in the Midlands requires both regionally extensive and localized fluid flow. |
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