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Experimental simulation of plagioclase diagenesis atP-T conditions of 3.5 km burial depth
Authors:Stephen L Karner  B Charlotte Schreiber
Institution:(1) Department of Geology, Queens College, 11367 Flushing, NY, USA;(2) Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, 10964 Palisades, NY, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, M.I.T., 02139 Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract:Dissolution of plagioclase under the physical conditions at shallow to intermediate burial depths is a prime candidate for secondary porosity generation in feldspathic siliciclastic sediments. The diagenetic behavior of granular aggregates of plagioclase feldspar and quartz has been investigated by experimentation performed in a Bridgeman-type pressure vessel. The experiments, each of two weeks duration, simulated pressure-temperature conditions approximating 3.5 km burial depth. By using a double-acting pore-fluid reservoir, solutions of various chemistries were cycled through samples composed of oligoclase or labradorite feldspar and quartz (90:10 wt% respectively).Scanning electron microscope analysis of the post-experiment samples reveals dissolution features and precipitated products. Dissolution voids of sim10 microns occur typically in areas of maximum stress such as crack-tips and grain contacts. Dissolution on a larger scale is exemplified by topographical smoothing of grain su faces. The dissolved species are subsequently reprecipitated as Ca-enriched overgrowths (possibly zeolites) and clays. These precipitates are found individually on the scale of 10 microns and collectively as surface coatings on both feldspar and quartz grains. Atomic absorption spectroscopic analyses of the pore fluid suggest that the fluid chemistry is consistent with the observed experimental precipitates.These experiments show that clay coatings are unnecessary precursors to grain surface dissolution and that the diagenetic precipitation is not mineral selective. Also, the mass transfer of the dissolved species appears to be localized because grains displaying both dissolution and precipitation features are commonplace. Volume changes due to mineral transformation/alteration may increase secondary porosity if the dissolved species produced from dissolution are only partially involved in reprecipitation and the remaining dissolved material is flushed out by the pore fluids. However, if the mass transfer is primarily local then permeability would significantly decrease as precipitates may choke the pore throats.
Keywords:Experimental  plagioclase  diagenesis  porosity  permeability  dissolution  precipitates
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