Repository logo
 

Publication:
Septarian carbonate concretions in the Permian Rio do Rasto Formation: Birth, growth and implications for the early diagenetic history of southwestern Gondwana succession

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Advisor

Coadvisor

Graduate program

Undergraduate course

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier B.V.

Type

Article

Access right

Acesso abertoAcesso Aberto

Abstract

Between the Late Carboniferous and Early Triassic, the southwestern Gondwana supercontinent was characterized by the development of a huge intracratonic basin. A large confined epeiric sea and the accumulation of a transgressive-regressive sequence were formed by continuous subsidence related to tectonic effects caused by the Sanrafaelic Orogeny and the consequent generation of accommodation space. The Permian Rio do Rasto Formation documents the last progradational cycle related to the complete continentalization of this epeiric sea. The basal member of the Rio do Rasto Formation (Serrinha) is believed to have been deposited in a shallow epicontinental water body subjected to storms and influenced by episodic deltaic incursions. One of the most remarkable characteristics of the Serrinha Member is the presence of carbonate concretions hosted in mudstones and very fine sandstones. Here, we combine sedimentological and petrographic descriptions coupled with geochemical and stable carbon and oxygen isotopic data to elucidate the nature of these carbonate concretions. The non-deformed internal structure, decreasing proportion of carbonate cements relative to detrital grains toward the concretion edges, core-to-rim isotopic variations, and perhaps most importantly, the preservation of a well-developed cardhouse fabric support an early diagenetic origin for these structures at shallow burial depths of tens of meters. Stable isotope analyses of micritic calcite cements and calcites filling the septarian fractures reveal major negative excursions in both delta O-18 and delta C-13 values. Oxygen isotope ratios obtained for the micritic calcite cements vary between -12.1 and -2.6%.. The calcite filling septarian fractures also exhibit negative values of delta O-18 (-14.2 to -13.8%.), with an average of 14%0. The delta C-13 values of micritic calcite cements range from -5.0-0.2%0. The carbon isotopic data from the calcite-filling septarian fractures are also negative (4.4 to -3.3%0). The delta O-18 signatures suggest that the early diagenetic carbonate concretions precipitated in a shallow freshwater environment rather than in a marine setting. The delta C-13 values suggest that the carbon isotopes were derived from a source with slightly depleted C-13, supporting at least a partial organogenic contribution with weak sulfate reduction rates typical of freshwater systems. Sedimentological analysis shows that the epicontinental water body in which the Serrinha Member was deposited was constantly supplied by rivers and meteoric waters, which suggests that an enormous freshwater basin with restricted marine connections to the Panthalassa Ocean once existed. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Description

Keywords

Septarian carbonate concretions, Late Permian, Southwestern Gondwana, Parana Basin, Rio do Rasto Formation, Serrinha Member

Language

English

Citation

Sedimentary Geology. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science Bv, v. 326, p. 1-15, 2015.

Related itens

Units

Departments

Undergraduate courses

Graduate programs