Insights into past tectonism from authigenic quartz
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Abstract
Figures
Figure 1 The temporal history of a quartz grain after deposition. Stage I to II: burial followed by diagenesis and the formation of authigenic cements as temperatures higher than ∼60–70 °C are reached; stage II to III: uplift; stage III to IV: weathering before transport to the final depositional setting, potentially with multiple cycles of stages I to III in between; and finally stage IV to VI: burial in a new system leading to diagenesis and again reaching the threshold temperature of 60–70 °C leading to new syntaxial authigenic quartz growth. | Figure 2 Rounded authigenic quartz has been reported from several stratigraphic intervals and locations worldwide. The red star indicates the position of Wilhelmøya. The figure compilation was made from Johnsson et al. (1988), Rezaee and Tingate (1997), Dott (2003), Götte and Richter (2006), and Ulmer-Scholle et al. (2014). Abbreviations: Ord. = Ordovician, L. Carb. = Late Carboniferous, E. P. = Early Permian, L. Tr. = Late Triassic, E. Ju. = Early Jurassic, Pg. = Palaeogene, Hol. = Holocene, Mod. = Modern. | Figure 3 CL and petrographic images showing rounded authigenic quartz overgrowths at the surface of detrital quartz grains. (a) Representative light microscope micrograph of a portion of quartz grain with dust rims and fluid inclusion assemblages (FIAs; circled) containing primary fluid inclusions. (b) RGB-CL image highlights two generations of authigenic cements. The last generation has filled in fractures in both the detrital grain and the first generation of authigenic cement. | Figure 4 Suggested three step procedure to use rounded authigenic quartz cements to identify tectonic source. (a) Identification of recycled authigenic cements including collecting information about the chemical fingerprint using SEM-CL and RGB-CL. (b) Quantification of recycled (R) and other sedimentary quartz grains without authigenic fingerprints (P) providing the fraction of recycled grains in the sediment. (c) Regional mapping to investigate whether the source for recycled material is intra- or extra-basinal. (i) R/P ratios are expected to increase towards a local source if recycled grains from a sole intra-basinal high are mixed with particles from an external source that dominates the input to the basin. (ii) If mixing of recycled sediment from an extra-basinal source area and other extra-basinal particles occur inside the basin, R/P fractions are expected to increase towards the drainage area where recycled units are exposed. (iii) No apparent R/P gradients are expected if multiple intra-basinal highs exist, or (iv) if the recycled material is mixed with other sedimentary particles in the drainage system prior to entering the basin. |
Figure 1 | Figure 2 | Figure 3 | Figure 4 |
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Introduction
Unravelling distinct fingerprints of past tectonic activity from the sedimentary record is important to understand the basin fill history. This is however not always straightforward. For example, persistent individual grains can be buried, uplifted, weathered and eroded, transported and redeposited, and even undergo several such cycles reflecting the large scale tectonic processes operating in the area over time (Fig. 1). In other words, the “sink” of one sedimentary cycle may act as the “source” for subsequent sedimentary sequences (Andersen et al., 2016
Andersen, T., Kristoffersen, M., Elburg, M.A. (2016) How far can we trust provenance and crustal evolution from detrital zircons? A South African case study. Gondwana Research 34, 129–148.
). While detrital zircon dating in most cases can provide reliable source area ages, radiation damage (metamictisation) may destroy old age signatures (Andersen et al., 2016Andersen, T., Kristoffersen, M., Elburg, M.A. (2016) How far can we trust provenance and crustal evolution from detrital zircons? A South African case study. Gondwana Research 34, 129–148.
), recycling may obscure the source to sink interpretations, and zircon ages may not be unique for a given source area (Slagstad and Kirkland, 2017Slagstad, T., Kirkland, C.L. (2017) The use of detrital zircon data in terrane analysis: A nonunique answer to provenance and tectonostratigraphic position in the Scandinavian Caledonides. Lithosphere 9, 1002–1011.
). Conventional source-to-sink models therefore do not apply to recycled sediments and the consequences of ignoring or misinterpreting recycled components as primary deposits may lead to incorrect provenance interpretations, inaccurate sediment budgeting, erroneous thermal histories and uplift estimates – ultimately affecting basin modelling and subsurface predictions.During a sedimentary cycle, quartz grains can retain part of the information about their travel and the physical conditions they have been exposed to without giving information about the exact timing and duration of tectonic events. Authigenic quartz cement may form as syntaxial overgrowths on detrital quartz grains when sediments are buried to 2–3 km depth and temperatures reach about 70 °C (Walderhaug, 1994
Walderhaug, O. (1994) Precipitation rates for quartz cement in sandstones determined by fluid-inclusion microthermometry and temperature-history modelling. Sedimentary Research 64, 324–333.
). As cements completely fill irregular detrital grain surfaces, microscopic pockets of the diagenetic fluid may be trapped below the cement (Bodnar, 2003Bodnar, R.J. (2003) Chapter 4. Introduction to aqueous-electrolyte fluid inclusions. In: Samson, I., Anderson, A., Marshall, D. (Eds.) Fluid Inclusions: Analysis and Interpretation. Mineralogical Association of Canada, Ottawa, Ont., Short Course 32, 81–99.
). Fluid inclusions carry a geochemical fingerprint of the temperature and pore water chemistry at the time of quartz formation, and they can be used as geothermometers and even tectonic markers recording the physical conditions at the time of quartz cementation (Walderhaug, 1994Walderhaug, O. (1994) Precipitation rates for quartz cement in sandstones determined by fluid-inclusion microthermometry and temperature-history modelling. Sedimentary Research 64, 324–333.
; Boullier, 1999Boullier, A.-M. (1999) Fluid inclusions – tectonic indicators. Journal of Structural Geology 21, 1229–1235.
).Another attribute that provides additional information on the physico-chemical state of the fluid from which quartz crystallised is the cathodoluminescence (CL) spectra emitted after shooting the crystals with electrons (Götze et al., 2001
Götze, J., Plötze, M., Habermann, D. (2001) Origin, spectral characteristics and practical applications of the cathodoluminescence (CL) of quartz – a review. Mineralogy and Petrology 71, 225–250.
; Götte and Richter, 2006Götte, T., Richter, D.K. (2006) Cathodoluminescence characterization of quartz particles in mature arenites. Sedimentology 53, 1347–1359.
). The CL spectra may also distinguish several generations of quartz cement formed during different diagenetic stages (Demars et al., 1996Demars, C., Pagel, M., Deloule, E., Blanc, P. (1996) Cathodoluminescence of quartz from sandtones: interpertation of the UV range by determination of trace element distributions and fluid-inclusion P-T-X properties in authigenic quartz. American Mineralogist 81, 891–901.
).A third factor providing insight into the history of individual quartz grains is their roundness, traditionally used as an indicator for the degree of weathering and transport (Folk, 1951
Folk, R.L. (1951) Stages of textural maturity in sedimentary rocks. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 21, 127–130.
; Crook, 1968Crook, K.A.W. (1968) Weathering and roundness of quartz sand grains. Sedimentology 11, 171–182.
; Dott, 2003Dott, R.J., Jr. (2003) The importance of eolian abrasion in supermature quartz sandstones and the paradox of weathering on vegetation-free landscapes. The Journal of Geology 111, 387–405.
). Syntaxial quartz overgrowths tend to form sharp edges and straight crystal interfaces when growing unconfined, whereas chemical weathering and abrasion tend to smoothen the grain surfaces (Garzanti, 2017Garzanti, E. (2017) The maturity myth in sedimentology and provenance analysis. Journal of Sedimentary Research 87, 353–365.
). Rounded authigenic cements may thus provide evidence for large scale uplift of a precursor basin and subsequent weathering, erosion and transport of its sedimentary infill.Rounded and embayed authigenic quartz cements are found worldwide, unconstrained by time and space (Fig. 2; Johnsson et al., 1988
Johnsson, M.J., Stallard, R.F., Meade, R.H. (1988) First-cycle quartz arenites in the Orinoco river basin, Venezuela and Colombia. The Journal of Geology 96, 263–277.
; Rezaee and Tingate, 1997Rezaee, M.R., Tingate, P.R. (1997) Origin of quartz cement in the Tirrawarra sandstone, southern Cooper Basin, South Australia. Sedimentary Research 67, 168–177.
; Dott, 2003Dott, R.J., Jr. (2003) The importance of eolian abrasion in supermature quartz sandstones and the paradox of weathering on vegetation-free landscapes. The Journal of Geology 111, 387–405.
; Götte and Richter, 2006Götte, T., Richter, D.K. (2006) Cathodoluminescence characterization of quartz particles in mature arenites. Sedimentology 53, 1347–1359.
; Ulmer-Scholle et al., 2014Ulmer-Scholle, D.S., Scholle, P.A., Schieber, J., Raine, R.J. (2014) A color guide to the petrography of sandstones, siltstones, shales and associated rocks. American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, Memoir 109.
). Despite being found in old and recycled sediments, abraded or corroded authigenic quartz cements are rarely reported.Attempts have previously been made to use the geochemical characteristics of clastic quartz grains as indicators of provenance and depositional history (Blatt, 1967
Blatt, H. (1967) Provenance determinations and recycling of sediments. Sedimentary Research 37, 1031–1044.
; Augustsson and Reker, 2012Augustsson, C., Reker, A. (2012) Cathodolumenescence spectra of quartz as provenance indicators revisited. Journal of Sedimentary Research 82, 559–570.
; Ackerson et al., 2015Ackerson, M.R., Tailby, N.D., Watson, E.B. (2015) Trace elements in quartz shed light on sediment provenance. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 16, 1894–1904.
), but only a couple of studies have targeted individual quartz grains as indicators of past tectonics (Vityk and Bodnar, 1995Vityk, M.O., Bodnar, R.J. (1995) Textural evolution of synthetic fluid inclusions in quartz during reequilibration, with applications to tectonic reconstruction. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 121, 309–323.
; Seyedolali et al., 1997Seyedolali, A., Krinsley, D.H., Boggs, S., Jr., O’Hara, P.F., Dypvik, H., Goles, G.G. (1997) Provenance interpretation of quartz by scanning electron microscopy – cathodoluminescence fabric analysis. Geology 25, 787–790.
). In this study, we launch a new method that combines fluid inclusion data with SEM-CL and that is complementary and supplementary to the standard methods that are in use to reconstruct past tectonism and provenance, and we demonstrate the kind of geochemical information individual quartz grains and quartz rich sedimentary rocks carry. We finally propose the regional mapping required to understand past tectonism of the basin and beyond. To demonstrate this, we used quartz grains from the Lower-Middle Mesozoic sedimentary succession exposed at Wilhelmøya, on the western Barents Shelf. These sediments are poorly lithified sands that have not been buried to substantial depths. Vitrinite reflectance data suggests a maximum burial temperature of ∼40 °C (Haile et al., 2019Haile, B.G., Czarniecka, U., Xi, K., Smyrak-Sikora, A., Jahren, J., Braathen, A., Hellevang, H. (2019) Hydrothermally induced diagenesis: Evidence from shallow marine-deltaic sediments, Wilhelmøya, Svalbard. Geoscience Frontiers 10, 629–649.
). As these deposits have not been exposed to depths sufficient for quartz cementation, the presence of authigenic cements clearly demonstrates that grains covered by overgrowths are allogenic and must be recycled from older units.top
Microscale Properties of Authigenic Quartz
Authigenic quartz cement can be identified using a standard petrographic microscope. Quartz overgrowths (QO) are separated from detrital quartz grains (DQ) by palaeo-rims that have accumulated dust and where fluid inclusions have formed (Fig. 3a). This observation is supported by RGB-CL intensity images highlighting the different cathodoluminescence response of authigenic cements and the detrital quartz grain (Fig. 3b). The original detrital grain constitutes the core, whereas authigenic quartz fills in fractures and covers parts of the detrital grain surface. The RGB-CL image discriminates in this case two generations of cements; an innermost dark blue cement being the oldest, and a red cement filling fractures both in the detrital quartz grain and in the blue cement. The reason for variations in the RGB colour component intensities (mainly red and blue) is not perfectly known, but is likely related to the chemical-physical properties of the fluid from which quartz crystallises, and on the growth rate of the authigenic cement (Götte and Richter, 2006
Götte, T., Richter, D.K. (2006) Cathodoluminescence characterization of quartz particles in mature arenites. Sedimentology 53, 1347–1359.
). By distinguishing detrital and authigenic quartz phases from one another, we can confirm that the investigated grain was subjected to at least one previous cycle of deep burial prior to its current compaction state. The outer edges of the quartz cement seen as dark blue in RGB-CL (Fig. 3b) are rounded to different degrees, signifying that the grain has been exposed at the Earth’s surface after the authigenic cements formed at depth.top
Information from Single Quartz Grains
The Wilhelmøya grains must have been buried to a depth of at least 3–4 km based on the highest recorded fluid inclusion temperature of 130 °C (Haile et al., 2019
Haile, B.G., Czarniecka, U., Xi, K., Smyrak-Sikora, A., Jahren, J., Braathen, A., Hellevang, H. (2019) Hydrothermally induced diagenesis: Evidence from shallow marine-deltaic sediments, Wilhelmøya, Svalbard. Geoscience Frontiers 10, 629–649.
). Although a basin inversion of 4 km would certainly represent a major tectonic event, the more difficult task is to identify the palaeo-basin responsible for burying the quartz grains to these depths.A single grain indicates sediment recycling and extent of uplift for that particular grain, but cannot say much about the locality or timing of a specific tectonic event. An in depth analysis of the quartz assemblage from a field site or drill core can however bring us closer to unravel past tectonics of a region. By analysing the CL images of a representative number of grains, normally a few hundred is sufficient (van der Plas and Tobi, 1965
van der Plas, L., Tobi, A.C. (1965) A chart for judging the reliability of point counting results. American Journal of Science 263, 87–90.
), one can obtain the fraction of grains that are tectonically uplifted and transported to the site. If using the RGB-CL option one can even identify authigenic grains sourced from different tectonic events, or cements formed during different stages in the same grain such as seen in Figure 3b. The RGB-CL image is like a fingerprint reflecting the different chemical and physical conditions upon the formation of the cements. One important factor to keep in mind when estimating the fraction of grains being recycled, is that only quartz grains must be counted and analysed. The CL images do not distinguish quartz from other minerals such as feldspars or oxides, and only quartz can carry the syntaxial overgrowths being evidence of the uplift and recycling events. Other minerals may have had nucleation and non-syntaxial quartz cement, but this is rather an exception during sandstone diagenesis.We propose a two step procedure for the identification and quantification of recycled grains. First quartz is separated from other minerals using SEM-EDS element mapping, before the recycled grains are identified by SEM-CL and the tectonic fingerprint is found by CL-RGB analyses together with fluid inclusion data (Fig. 4a). The second step is to separate the identified recycled grains (R) from other sedimentary quartz grains without authigenic recycling fingerprints (P) and quantify the fraction of the former (Fig. 4b). It is important at this stage to realise that authigenic cements may be completely removed after chemical corrosion and transport, and the value of (R) must therefore be regarded a minimum estimate.
This work requires some effort, but both the SEM work and the image analyses can to a certain degree be automated thereby reducing both operator dependent factors and man hours (Sime and Ferguson, 2003
Sime, L.C., Ferguson, R.I. (2003) Information on grain sizes in gravel-bed rivers by automated image analysis. Journal of Sedimentary Research 73, 630–636.
; Wu et al., 2019Wu, Y., Misra, S., Sondergeld, C., Curtin, M., Jernigen, J. (2019) Machine learning for locating organic matter and pores in scanning electron microscopy images of organic-rich shales. Fuel 253, 662–676.
).top
Integration of Recycled Quartz Grains into Regional Studies
To identify possible tectonic source areas, it is necessary to identify and quantify recycled quartz grains in a larger region. The distribution of R/P fractions in the basin may suggest whether the source for recycled grains is intra- or extra-basinal (Fig. 4). If the source terrain is intra-basinal and recycled grains are mixed with sediments from an external source that dominates the input to the basin, R/P gradients are expected to increase and converge towards the local source. A similar convergence of gradients is expected if mixing of recycled and sedimentary grains from different extra-basinal source areas occurs inside the basin. If, on the other hand, multiple uplifted intra-basinal sources exist, or mixing of primary and recycled particles occur in the drainage system prior to entering the sedimentary basin (Fig. 4c), no apparent R/P gradients are expected. However, it can, even in cases with multiple intra-basinal sources, be possible to identify gradients in cases with very characteristic CL-RGB signatures from specific uplift events. With this concept in mind, integrating information on the amount of recycled grains on a regional or basin scale may reveal new information on the past tectonics that no other method can provide.
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Conclusions
In this paper we have launched a new methodology utilising geochemical and textural fingerprints of quartz cements to unravel past tectonics and sediment routing. The new method uses the fact that authigenic cements on single quartz grains carry chemical, textural and physical fingerprints that can provide information about depth of burial, number of former deep burial cycles and weathering and transport of the grain prior to final deposition. Integrating the analysis of single quartz grains over a region may furthermore provide the information required to understand intra- or extra-basinal past tectonism. One of the key advantages of the method is the lack of fertility biases in the quartz as it is a framework grain thus the relative proportion of the intra-basinal/extra-basinal sources can be calculated. The potential for unravelling past tectonic processes using geochemical and textural analyses of recycled grains may be attributed to polycyclic sediments worldwide. With this new application, there will be more emphasis on locating recycled quartz grains and harvest their full potential as a carrier of geological information.
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Acknowledgements
We wholeheartedly thank the reviewers, Amy Gough and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive and helpful comments! The study was supported by the NRC ISBAR project (project 267689) and by VISTA (project 6270). Sample preparation and SEM analyses were performed at the University of Oslo, and we are thankful for laboratory assistance from S. Simonsen.
Editor: Gavin Foster
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References
Ackerson, M.R., Tailby, N.D., Watson, E.B. (2015) Trace elements in quartz shed light on sediment provenance. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 16, 1894–1904.
Show in context
Attempts have previously been made to use the geochemical characteristics of clastic quartz grains as indicators of provenance and depositional history (Blatt, 1967; Augustsson and Reker, 2012; Ackerson et al., 2015), but only a couple of studies have targeted individual quartz grains as indicators of past tectonics (Vityk and Bodnar, 1995; Seyedolali et al., 1997).
View in article
Andersen, T., Kristoffersen, M., Elburg, M.A. (2016) How far can we trust provenance and crustal evolution from detrital zircons? A South African case study. Gondwana Research 34, 129–148.
Show in context
In other words, the “sink” of one sedimentary cycle may act as the “source” for subsequent sedimentary sequences (Andersen et al., 2016).
View in article
While detrital zircon dating in most cases can provide reliable source area ages, radiation damage (metamictisation) may destroy old age signatures (Andersen et al., 2016), recycling may obscure the source to sink interpretations, and zircon ages may not be unique for a given source area (Slagstad and Kirkland, 2017).
View in article
Augustsson, C., Reker, A. (2012) Cathodolumenescence spectra of quartz as provenance indicators revisited. Journal of Sedimentary Research 82, 559–570.
Show in context
Attempts have previously been made to use the geochemical characteristics of clastic quartz grains as indicators of provenance and depositional history (Blatt, 1967; Augustsson and Reker, 2012; Ackerson et al., 2015), but only a couple of studies have targeted individual quartz grains as indicators of past tectonics (Vityk and Bodnar, 1995; Seyedolali et al., 1997).
View in article
Blatt, H. (1967) Provenance determinations and recycling of sediments. Sedimentary Research 37, 1031–1044.
Show in context
Attempts have previously been made to use the geochemical characteristics of clastic quartz grains as indicators of provenance and depositional history (Blatt, 1967; Augustsson and Reker, 2012; Ackerson et al., 2015), but only a couple of studies have targeted individual quartz grains as indicators of past tectonics (Vityk and Bodnar, 1995; Seyedolali et al., 1997).
View in article
Bodnar, R.J. (2003) Chapter 4. Introduction to aqueous-electrolyte fluid inclusions. In: Samson, I., Anderson, A., Marshall, D. (Eds.) Fluid Inclusions: Analysis and Interpretation. Mineralogical Association of Canada, Ottawa, Ont., Short Course 32, 81–99.
Show in context
As cements completely fill irregular detrital grain surfaces, microscopic pockets of the diagenetic fluid may be trapped below the cement (Bodnar, 2003).
View in article
Boullier, A.-M. (1999) Fluid inclusions – tectonic indicators. Journal of Structural Geology 21, 1229–1235.
Show in context
Fluid inclusions carry a geochemical fingerprint of the temperature and pore water chemistry at the time of quartz formation, and they can be used as geothermometers and even tectonic markers recording the physical conditions at the time of quartz cementation (Walderhaug, 1994; Boullier, 1999).
View in article
Crook, K.A.W. (1968) Weathering and roundness of quartz sand grains. Sedimentology 11, 171–182.
Show in context
A third factor providing insight into the history of individual quartz grains is their roundness, traditionally used as an indicator for the degree of weathering and transport (Folk, 1951; Crook, 1968; Dott, 2003).
View in article
Demars, C., Pagel, M., Deloule, E., Blanc, P. (1996) Cathodoluminescence of quartz from sandtones: interpertation of the UV range by determination of trace element distributions and fluid-inclusion P-T-X properties in authigenic quartz. American Mineralogist 81, 891–901.
Show in context
The CL spectra may also distinguish several generations of quartz cement formed during different diagenetic stages (Demars et al., 1996).
View in article
Dott, R.J., Jr. (2003) The importance of eolian abrasion in supermature quartz sandstones and the paradox of weathering on vegetation-free landscapes. The Journal of Geology 111, 387–405.
Show in context
A third factor providing insight into the history of individual quartz grains is their roundness, traditionally used as an indicator for the degree of weathering and transport (Folk, 1951; Crook, 1968; Dott, 2003).
View in article
Rounded and embayed authigenic quartz cements are found worldwide, unconstrained by time and space (Fig. 2; Johnsson et al., 1988; Rezaee and Tingate, 1997; Dott, 2003; Götte and Richter, 2006; Ulmer-Scholle et al., 2014).
View in article
The red star indicates the position of Wilhelmøya. The figure compilation was made from Johnsson et al. (1988), Rezaee and Tingate (1997), Dott (2003), Götte and Richter (2006), and Ulmer-Scholle et al. (2014).
View in article
Folk, R.L. (1951) Stages of textural maturity in sedimentary rocks. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 21, 127–130.
Show in context
A third factor providing insight into the history of individual quartz grains is their roundness, traditionally used as an indicator for the degree of weathering and transport (Folk, 1951; Crook, 1968; Dott, 2003).
View in article
Garzanti, E. (2017) The maturity myth in sedimentology and provenance analysis. Journal of Sedimentary Research 87, 353–365.
Show in context
Syntaxial quartz overgrowths tend to form sharp edges and straight crystal interfaces when growing unconfined, whereas chemical weathering and abrasion tend to smoothen the grain surfaces (Garzanti, 2017).
View in article
Götte, T., Richter, D.K. (2006) Cathodoluminescence characterization of quartz particles in mature arenites. Sedimentology 53, 1347–1359.
Show in context
Another attribute that provides additional information on the physico-chemical state of the fluid from which quartz crystallised is the cathodoluminescence (CL) spectra emitted after shooting the crystals with electrons (Götze et al., 2001; Götte and Richter, 2006).
View in article
Rounded and embayed authigenic quartz cements are found worldwide, unconstrained by time and space (Fig. 2; Johnsson et al., 1988; Rezaee and Tingate, 1997; Dott, 2003; Götte and Richter, 2006; Ulmer-Scholle et al., 2014).
View in article
The reason for variations in the RGB colour component intensities (mainly red and blue) is not perfectly known, but is likely related to the chemical-physical properties of the fluid from which quartz crystallises, and on the growth rate of the authigenic cement (Götte and Richter, 2006).
View in article
The red star indicates the position of Wilhelmøya. The figure compilation was made from Johnsson et al. (1988), Rezaee and Tingate (1997), Dott (2003), Götte and Richter (2006), and Ulmer-Scholle et al. (2014).
View in article
Götze, J., Plötze, M., Habermann, D. (2001) Origin, spectral characteristics and practical applications of the cathodoluminescence (CL) of quartz – a review. Mineralogy and Petrology 71, 225–250.
Show in context
Another attribute that provides additional information on the physico-chemical state of the fluid from which quartz crystallised is the cathodoluminescence (CL) spectra emitted after shooting the crystals with electrons (Götze et al., 2001; Götte and Richter, 2006).
View in article
Haile, B.G., Czarniecka, U., Xi, K., Smyrak-Sikora, A., Jahren, J., Braathen, A., Hellevang, H. (2019) Hydrothermally induced diagenesis: Evidence from shallow marine-deltaic sediments, Wilhelmøya, Svalbard. Geoscience Frontiers 10, 629–649.
Show in context
Vitrinite reflectance data suggests a maximum burial temperature of ∼40 °C (Haile et al., 2019).
View in article
The Wilhelmøya grains must have been buried to a depth of at least 3–4 km based on the highest recorded fluid inclusion temperature of 130 °C (Haile et al., 2019).
View in article
Johnsson, M.J., Stallard, R.F., Meade, R.H. (1988) First-cycle quartz arenites in the Orinoco river basin, Venezuela and Colombia. The Journal of Geology 96, 263–277.
Show in context
Rounded and embayed authigenic quartz cements are found worldwide, unconstrained by time and space (Fig. 2; Johnsson et al., 1988; Rezaee and Tingate, 1997; Dott, 2003; Götte and Richter, 2006; Ulmer-Scholle et al., 2014).
View in article
The red star indicates the position of Wilhelmøya. The figure compilation was made from Johnsson et al. (1988), Rezaee and Tingate (1997), Dott (2003), Götte and Richter (2006), and Ulmer-Scholle et al. (2014).
View in article
Rezaee, M.R., Tingate, P.R. (1997) Origin of quartz cement in the Tirrawarra sandstone, southern Cooper Basin, South Australia. Sedimentary Research 67, 168–177.
Show in context
Rounded and embayed authigenic quartz cements are found worldwide, unconstrained by time and space (Fig. 2; Johnsson et al., 1988; Rezaee and Tingate, 1997; Dott, 2003; Götte and Richter, 2006; Ulmer-Scholle et al., 2014).
View in article
The red star indicates the position of Wilhelmøya. The figure compilation was made from Johnsson et al. (1988), Rezaee and Tingate (1997), Dott (2003), Götte and Richter (2006), and Ulmer-Scholle et al. (2014).
View in article
Seyedolali, A., Krinsley, D.H., Boggs, S., Jr., O’Hara, P.F., Dypvik, H., Goles, G.G. (1997) Provenance interpretation of quartz by scanning electron microscopy – cathodoluminescence fabric analysis. Geology 25, 787–790.
Show in context
Attempts have previously been made to use the geochemical characteristics of clastic quartz grains as indicators of provenance and depositional history (Blatt, 1967; Augustsson and Reker, 2012; Ackerson et al., 2015), but only a couple of studies have targeted individual quartz grains as indicators of past tectonics (Vityk and Bodnar, 1995; Seyedolali et al., 1997).
View in article
Sime, L.C., Ferguson, R.I. (2003) Information on grain sizes in gravel-bed rivers by automated image analysis. Journal of Sedimentary Research 73, 630–636.
Show in context
This work requires some effort, but both the SEM work and the image analyses can to a certain degree be automated thereby reducing both operator dependent factors and man hours (Sime and Ferguson, 2003; Wu et al., 2019).
View in article
Slagstad, T., Kirkland, C.L. (2017) The use of detrital zircon data in terrane analysis: A nonunique answer to provenance and tectonostratigraphic position in the Scandinavian Caledonides. Lithosphere 9, 1002–1011.
Show in context
In other words, the “sink” of one sedimentary cycle may act as the “source” for subsequent sedimentary sequences (Andersen et al., 2016). While detrital zircon dating in most cases can provide reliable source area ages, radiation damage (metamictisation) may destroy old age signatures (Andersen et al., 2016), recycling may obscure the source to sink interpretations, and zircon ages may not be unique for a given source area (Slagstad and Kirkland, 2017).
View in article
Ulmer-Scholle, D.S., Scholle, P.A., Schieber, J., Raine, R.J. (2014) A color guide to the petrography of sandstones, siltstones, shales and associated rocks. American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, Memoir 109.
Show in context
Rounded and embayed authigenic quartz cements are found worldwide, unconstrained by time and space (Fig. 2; Johnsson et al., 1988; Rezaee and Tingate, 1997; Dott, 2003; Götte and Richter, 2006; Ulmer-Scholle et al., 2014).
View in article
The red star indicates the position of Wilhelmøya. The figure compilation was made from Johnsson et al. (1988), Rezaee and Tingate (1997), Dott (2003), Götte and Richter (2006), and Ulmer-Scholle et al. (2014).
View in article
van der Plas, L., Tobi, A.C. (1965) A chart for judging the reliability of point counting results. American Journal of Science 263, 87–90.
Show in context
By analysing the CL images of a representative number of grains, normally a few hundred is sufficient (van der Plas and Tobi, 1965).
View in article
Vityk, M.O., Bodnar, R.J. (1995) Textural evolution of synthetic fluid inclusions in quartz during reequilibration, with applications to tectonic reconstruction. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 121, 309–323.
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Attempts have previously been made to use the geochemical characteristics of clastic quartz grains as indicators of provenance and depositional history (Blatt, 1967; Augustsson and Reker, 2012; Ackerson et al., 2015), but only a couple of studies have targeted individual quartz grains as indicators of past tectonics (Vityk and Bodnar, 1995; Seyedolali et al., 1997).
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Walderhaug, O. (1994) Precipitation rates for quartz cement in sandstones determined by fluid-inclusion microthermometry and temperature-history modelling. Sedimentary Research 64, 324–333.
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Authigenic quartz cement may form as syntaxial overgrowths on detrital quartz grains when sediments are buried to 2–3 km depth and temperatures reach about 70 °C (Walderhaug, 1994).
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Fluid inclusions carry a geochemical fingerprint of the temperature and pore water chemistry at the time of quartz formation, and they can be used as geothermometers and even tectonic markers recording the physical conditions at the time of quartz cementation (Walderhaug, 1994; Boullier, 1999).
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Wu, Y., Misra, S., Sondergeld, C., Curtin, M., Jernigen, J. (2019) Machine learning for locating organic matter and pores in scanning electron microscopy images of organic-rich shales. Fuel 253, 662–676.
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This work requires some effort, but both the SEM work and the image analyses can to a certain degree be automated thereby reducing both operator dependent factors and man hours (Sime and Ferguson, 2003; Wu et al., 2019).
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Supplementary Information
The Supplementary Information includes:
- Sample Description
- Analytical Procedures
- Figure S-1
- Supplementary Information References
Download the Supplementary Information (PDF).