Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6435422 Marine and Petroleum Geology 2014 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Stratabound hydrothermal dolostone in Benicàssim extend >7 km away from faults.•Dolostone formed at 80-110 °C from a fluid that leached underlying Basement rocks.•The most likely dolomitizing fluids are evolved seawater and basement brines.•The maximum dolomitization capacity occurs at 75-125 °C.•Post-rift thermal convection is the most plausible dolomitization flow source.

The mechanisms responsible for the formation of huge volumes of dolomitized rocks associated with faults are not well understood. We present a case study for high-temperature dolomitization of an Early Cretaceous (Aptian-Albian) ramp in Benicàssim (Maestrat basin, E Spain). In this area, seismic-scale fault-controlled stratabound dolostone bodies extend over several kilometres away from large-scale faults. This work aims at evaluating different Mg sources for dolomitization, estimating the reactivity of dolomitizing fluids at variable temperature and quantifying the required versus available fluid volumes to account for the Benicàssim dolostones. Field relationships, stable 13C and 18O isotopes, as well as radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr isotopes, indicate that dolomitization at Benicàssim was produced by a high-temperature fluid (>80 °C). 13C and 18O isotopic compositions for dolomite vary from +0.5 to +2.9‰ V-PDB and from +21.1 to +24.3 V-SMOW, respectively. A Mg source analysis reveals that the most likely dolomitizing fluid was seawater-derived brine that interacted with underlying Triassic red beds and the Paleozoic basement. Geochemical models suggest that evolved seawater can be considerably more reactive than high-salinity brines, and the maximum reactivity occurs at about 100 °C. Mass-balance calculations indicate that interstitial fluids with high pressure and/or high temperature relative to the normal geothermal gradient cannot account for the volume of dolomite at Benicàssim. Instead a pervasive fluid circulation mechanism, like thermal convection, is required to provide a sufficient volume of dolomitizing fluid, which most likely occurred during the Late Cretaceous post-rift stage of the Maestrat basin. This study illustrates the importance of fluid budget quantification to critically evaluate genetic models for dolomitization and other diagenetic processes.

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