Abstract
The thinolites in the Quaternary tufas and tufa mounds of the Lahontan and Mono Lake basins of the western United States are identified as being pseudomorphous after crystals of the mineral ikaite, CaCO3̇6H2O. Ikaite is a metastable mineral in the sedimentary realm. It crystallizes from solution at temperatures close to zero Celsius but rapidly decomposes at warmer temperatures and becomes pseudomorphed in calcite by in situ redistribution of the calcium and carbonate ions. The likely implication is that the thinolites record ice-cold episodes during deposition of the tufas.
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GeoRef Subject
California
carbonates
chemically precipitated rocks
hydrates
paleoclimatology
Great Basin
Lake Lahontan
ikaite
Mono County California
tufa
Pleistocene
minerals
paleogeography
Cenozoic
Western U.S.
Mono Lake
North America
sedimentation
Nevada
Oregon
United States
sedimentary rocks
Basin and Range Province
stratigraphy
Quaternary
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