Mathematics – Logic
Scientific paper
Sep 1976
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1976gecoa..40.1095k&link_type=abstract
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, vol. 40, Issue 9, pp.1095-1108
Mathematics
Logic
64
Scientific paper
Hydrogen and oxygen isotopic compositions of cherts ( D for hydroxyl hydrogen in the chert, 18 O for the total oxygen) have been determined for a suite of samples from the central and western United States. When plotted on a D- 18 O diagram, Phanerozoic cherts define domains parallel to the meteoric water line which are different for different periods of geologic time. The elongation parallel to the meteoric water line suggests that meteoric waters were involved in the formation of many cherts. The existence of different chert -values for different geologic times indicates that once the granular microcrystalline quartz of cherts crystallizes its isotopic composition is preserved with time. An explanation for the change with time of the isotopic composition of cherts involving large changes with time in the isotopic composition of ocean water is unlikely since 18 O of the ocean would have had to decrease by about 3 between Carboniferous and Triassic time and then increase about 5%.` from Triassic to Cretaceous time. Such isotopic changes cannot be accounted for by extensive glaciation, sedimentation of hydrous minerals, or input of water from the mantle into the oceans. The variation with time of the chert -values can be satisfactorily explained in terms of past climatic temperature fluctuations if the chert-water isotope fractionation with temperature is approximated by 1000 ln = 3.09 × 10 6 T -2 - 3.29. Crystallization temperatures so inferred suggest that the average climatic temperatures for the central and western U.S. decreased from about 34 to 20°C through the Paleozoic, increased to 35-40°C in the Triassic, and then decreased through the Mesozoic to Tertiary values of about 17°C. A few data for the Precambrian suggest the possibility that Earth surface temperatures may have reached about 52°C at 1.3 b.y. and about 70°C at 3 b.y.
Epstein Samuel
Knauth Paul L.
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