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Sr evolution in the Upper Permian and Lower Triassic carbonates, NE Sichuan basin, China

Petrographic features, C, O and Sr isotopes, rare earth and trace elements were determined, and fluid inclusions were analyzed on various stages of interparticle cements and vug-fillings from the Upper Permian and Lower Triassic sour reservoirs in northeastern Sichuan basin. The aim was to assess the origin and evolution of palaeo-waters in the carbonates. The original water was contemporary seawater, from which marine cements precipitated with slightly high Sr contents (mean 1911 ppm), 87Sr/86Sr ratios from 0.7067 to 0.7082 and nonluminescent CL. The palaeo-seawater was diluted by meteoric water, as indicated by bright cathodoluminescence (CL) and Sr-depletion (0–516 ppm) in low-temperature calcite. When buried to temperatures of about 60–90 C during Middle to Late Triassic, the palaeo-water was enriched in Sr released from the transformation of precursor aragonite and calcite to dolomite, resulting in precipitation of substantial pre-bitumen Sr-rich minerals (SrSO4 and SrCO3). For un-dolomitized limestone sections, aragonite neomorphism may have contributed Sr to the precipitation of small amounts of Sr-bearing minerals and calcite crystals with elevated homogenization temperatures (HTs, mainly from 90 to 130 C) and wide Sr contents (from 34 to 3825 ppm), as recorded in stage III calcite. Since the Middle Jurassic, almost all of the early stage celestite and significant amounts of solid CaSO4 have been consumed by reactions with hydrocarbons (i.e., TSR), resulting in water enriched in isotopically light CO2 and HCO 3 ; Sr2þ; Ba2þ and Eu2+, as recorded in calcite with low d13C values (down to 18.9‰), 87Sr/86Sr ratios from 0.7072 to 0.7076, high HTs (mainly 110–198 C), positive Eu anomalies and high Sr and Ba contents. Subsequently, the water was uplifted and cooled down to about 115 C, celestite and strontianite were precipitated with the occurrence of natural elemental S immiscible inclusions. TSR may have produced significant amounts of freshwater, which brought down Sr concentrations and salinities of the palaeowaters to not more than about 6.0 wt.% NaCl equivalent.

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Last Updated April 29, 2014, 20:18 (LMT)
Created April 29, 2014, 18:08 (LMT)
Citation Stanley Mordensky, Sr evolution in the Upper Permian and Lower Triassic carbonates, NE Sichuan basin, China, 2014-04-29, https://edx.netl.doe.gov/dataset/sr-evolution-in-the-upper-permian-and-lower-triassic-carbonates-ne-sichuan-basin-china2
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