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A case for the growth of ancient ooids within the sediment pile

Noah T. Anderson, Clinton A. Cowan and Kristin D. Bergmann
A case for the growth of ancient ooids within the sediment pile
Journal of Sedimentary Research (August 2020) 90 (8): 843-854

Abstract

In modern ooid-forming environments in the Caribbean, aerobic respiration of organic matter below the sediment-water interface drives an increase in pCO2 and a corresponding decrease in carbonate saturation state (Omega ) that creates shallow sediment porewater that is neutral or slightly caustic to carbonate. The locus of ooid growth, therefore, is presumed to be in the water column during suspension, where supersaturation with respect to calcium carbonate is the norm. In the past, however, during conditions of low aqueous O2, high Omega , or low organic-matter input, the shallow sub-sediment marine burial environment was conducive to carbonate precipitation. Here we present petrographic and electron probe microanalyzer (EPMA) data from exquisitely preserved oolites through time that suggests that some ancient ooids may have grown within the sediment pile. We propose that each increment of ooid cortical growth originated as incipient isopachous marine cement formed during shallow burial within migrating ooid dunes. After a period of burial ( approximately weeks to months), ooids were remobilized and rounded during bedload transport. This "bedform model" for ooid growth explains: 1) why ancient ooids are not limited by the precipitation-abrasion balance that appears to prohibit modern tangential Caribbean ooids from achieving grain sizes larger than coarse sand, 2) the radial crystal fabric that defines the internal structure of many ancient ooids, and 3) the first-order correlation of the abundance of large and giant ooids in the rock record to periods with predicted high porewater Omega . This model implies that photosynthetic microbes were unimportant for growth of large and giant ooid but it remains agnostic to the effect of other microbes. The physical and chemical milieu of modern marine ooid-forming environments is perhaps not the best analogue for ancient ooid-forming environments; this should be considered when using ancient ooids to reconstruct secular trends in ocean chemistry.


ISSN: 1527-1404
EISSN: 1938-3681
Serial Title: Journal of Sedimentary Research
Serial Volume: 90
Serial Issue: 8
Title: A case for the growth of ancient ooids within the sediment pile
Affiliation: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Cambridge, MA, United States
Pages: 843-854
Published: 20200819
Text Language: English
Publisher: Society for Sedimentary Geology, Tulsa, OK, United States
References: 86
Accession Number: 2021-004964
Categories: Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sedimentsSedimentary petrology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 1 table
N09°00'00" - N22°00'00", W78°00'00" - W60°00'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Carleton College, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2021, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), Tulsa, OK, United States
Update Code: 202102

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