Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5161553 Organic Geochemistry 2017 63 Pages PDF
Abstract
During shale deposition in the West Cleveland Basin, Great Britain, H2S was immediately consumed in the water column by terrigenous input, supplying abundant reactive iron to form pyrite. These samples are characterized by low dibenzothiophene/phenanthrene ratios (< 0.2) and gammacerane indices (< 0.1) and are accompanied by high sulfur contents and abundant tiny pyrites (> 95% of < 7 μm in diameter), generated within the water column due to the immediate reaction of Fe2+ and H2S. In contrast, sulfidic (euxinic) bottom waters, possibly with enhanced salinity and stratified water column, prevailed due to a more restricted iron supply in Luxembourg, northern Germany and the Franconian Alb of southern Germany. A more oxygenated (dysoxic) bottom water column associated with anoxic sediments, i.e., anoxic/dysoxic boundary close to the sediment/water interface, prevailed in the Swabian Alb of southern Germany. Despite observed changes within each vertical profile at each site, large scale regional trends in depositional conditions can be clearly identified for the Early Toarcian.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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