Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina

Isotopic analysis can be used to interpret the origin of evaporitic sediments. A preliminary isotopic study of strontium, oxygen and sulphur has been carried out in Ca-sulphate facies of Jurassic marine evaporites (Tábanos Formation and Auquilco Formation) outcropping in southern Mendoza, Aconcagua-...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte
Aporte de:
id paper:paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte
record_format dspace
spelling paper:paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte2023-06-08T16:26:46Z Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin Argentina Isotopic composition Jurassic Marine evaporites evaporite Jurassic Argentina Neuquen Basin South America Western Hemisphere World Isotopic analysis can be used to interpret the origin of evaporitic sediments. A preliminary isotopic study of strontium, oxygen and sulphur has been carried out in Ca-sulphate facies of Jurassic marine evaporites (Tábanos Formation and Auquilco Formation) outcropping in southern Mendoza, Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin (Argentina), as a part of a comprehensive sedimentologic study. The analysed sections are located at arroyo Las Leñitas, Cañada Ancha and arroyo Blanco. Sampled units include laminated, banded, and nodular lithofacies, made up of anhydrite, secondary gypsum and calcite. The mineralogy was studied by conventional petrographic analysis and X-ray diffraction. The 87Sr/86Sr ratio was obtained in six samples, with values ranging from 0.706793 to 0.706839, which match marine calcium-sulphate data of the same age. A similar conclusion may be derived from ten samples analysed for oxygen (δ18O) and sulphur (δ34S) isotopic composition: the obtained values are between + 11.55‰ and + 14.42‰, and between + 17.25‰ and + 18.48‰ respectively. The sedimentologic-stratigraphic evidence and the isotopic data both suggest a marine origin for the Tábanos and Auquilco evaporites, without an analytically detectable contribution of continental waters or hydrothermal solutions. The results also suggest that no isotope fractionation occurred during the primary gypsum-to-anhydrite-to-secondary gypsum transformations. © UB-ICTJA. 2005 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin
Argentina
Isotopic composition
Jurassic
Marine evaporites
evaporite
Jurassic
Argentina
Neuquen Basin
South America
Western Hemisphere
World
spellingShingle Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin
Argentina
Isotopic composition
Jurassic
Marine evaporites
evaporite
Jurassic
Argentina
Neuquen Basin
South America
Western Hemisphere
World
Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina
topic_facet Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin
Argentina
Isotopic composition
Jurassic
Marine evaporites
evaporite
Jurassic
Argentina
Neuquen Basin
South America
Western Hemisphere
World
description Isotopic analysis can be used to interpret the origin of evaporitic sediments. A preliminary isotopic study of strontium, oxygen and sulphur has been carried out in Ca-sulphate facies of Jurassic marine evaporites (Tábanos Formation and Auquilco Formation) outcropping in southern Mendoza, Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin (Argentina), as a part of a comprehensive sedimentologic study. The analysed sections are located at arroyo Las Leñitas, Cañada Ancha and arroyo Blanco. Sampled units include laminated, banded, and nodular lithofacies, made up of anhydrite, secondary gypsum and calcite. The mineralogy was studied by conventional petrographic analysis and X-ray diffraction. The 87Sr/86Sr ratio was obtained in six samples, with values ranging from 0.706793 to 0.706839, which match marine calcium-sulphate data of the same age. A similar conclusion may be derived from ten samples analysed for oxygen (δ18O) and sulphur (δ34S) isotopic composition: the obtained values are between + 11.55‰ and + 14.42‰, and between + 17.25‰ and + 18.48‰ respectively. The sedimentologic-stratigraphic evidence and the isotopic data both suggest a marine origin for the Tábanos and Auquilco evaporites, without an analytically detectable contribution of continental waters or hydrothermal solutions. The results also suggest that no isotope fractionation occurred during the primary gypsum-to-anhydrite-to-secondary gypsum transformations. © UB-ICTJA.
title Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina
title_short Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina
title_full Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina
title_fullStr Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina
title_full_unstemmed Isotopic characterization of Jurassic evaporites. Aconcagua-Neuquén Basin, Argentina
title_sort isotopic characterization of jurassic evaporites. aconcagua-neuquén basin, argentina
publishDate 2005
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_16956133_v3_n2_p155_LoForte
_version_ 1768543202248228864