Other
Scientific paper
Oct 2007
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2007e%26psl.262..125d&link_type=abstract
Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 262, Issue 1-2, p. 125-137.
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1
Scientific paper
We use three-dimensional (3D) seismic data to image patterns developed by kilometer-scale chemical reaction boundaries to demonstrate that chemical patterns are scaleable phenomena. The patterns develop in biosiliceous marine successions due to the dissolution of opal-A (biogenic silica) and reprecipitation as opal-CT (Crystobalite and Tridymite) during burial. The reaction boundary patterns comprise roughly circular regions where the reaction boundary has preferentially advanced. These regions are up to 2.7 km wide, and c. 50 200 m in height and are termed cells. The cells form by amalgamation with adjacent juvenile cells. They also form by the incorporation of much smaller regions surrounding the cells where the chemical change has already occurred that we term ‘satellites’ (50 m wide). The reaction results in enhanced rates of sediment compaction hence differential advancement of reaction boundaries causes differential subsidence of the overburden, inducing folding and faulting of the overburden above the cellular promontories. We propose three potential mechanisms for the development of kilometer-scale reaction boundary patterns: (a) mass transport of silica by advection (b) perturbation of isotherms as a result of convective or conductive heat transport or (c) establishment of a positive feedback loop between fluid production due to the reaction, hydraulic fracturing and the upward and lateral transport of fluids. This study provides the first insights into how strongly patterned diagenetic reaction boundaries evolve at a basin scale, an initial conceptualization of the potential range of reaction boundary morphologies that could exist in this diagenetic system, and the likely mechanisms that could control them. Furthermore it demonstrates that the discipline of ‘seismic diagenesis’ could represent a completely new approach for the study of chemical diagenetic processes in sedimentary rocks.
Cartwright Joe A.
Davies Richard J.
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