@article{f0ef69a0ba5241d4b01a8fd5898e72a5,
title = "Contrasting intensity of aragonite dissolution and dolomite cementation in glacial versus interglacial intervals of a subtropical carbonate succession",
abstract = "Aragonite and high-Mg calcite are abundant in modern, neritic carbonate systems but almost absent in their fossil counterparts. Dissolution of these metastable mineral phases commonly leaves no visible trace in the sedimentary record, compromising the derivation of palaeoenvironmental information from the rock record. The upper 25 m of Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Site U1460 on the outer ramp of the western Australian Shelf were investigated to study shallow burial (tens of metres) marine diagenesis in organic-carbon poor sediments using microscopic, total organic carbon, biomarkers and mineralogical analysis in combination with porewater geochemistry. Aragonite dissolution is negligible at the seafloor but intensifies ca 5 m below, even though bulk porewaters are supersaturated for aragonite. This apparent contradiction likely results from dissolution in undersaturated microenvironments. Aragonite dissolution below 5 to 6 m is on average more intense in interglacial compared to glacial intervals. The presence of disseminated framboidal pyrite and porewater results indicate that minor sulphate reduction is active at IODP Site U1460. Sulphate reduction is probably limited by the low organic matter content (ca 0.2%). It is well-known from the literature that incipient sulphate reduction can lead to a drop in pH and consequently to carbonate dissolution. It is therefore assumed that the slightly higher concentration of organic matter in the interglacial intervals allowed increased aragonite dissolution during sulphate reduction compared to glacial beds. Low amounts of dolomite cement (<15%) start to form at the same depth (5 to 6 m) as aragonite dissolution intensifies. Dolomite formation and aragonite dissolution also show covariance on a metre-scale below 5 to 6 m, indicating that a low carbonate saturation state might enhance dolomite formation. This mechanism provides an indirect link between dolomite formation, aragonite dissolution and orbital cycles. The outcome of this study, therefore, contributes to a better understanding of differential diagenesis in marine carbonates.",
keywords = "Australia, IODP Expedition 356, IODP Site U1460, Limacina Dissolution Index, Quaternary, celestite, differential diagenesis",
author = "Lars Reuning and Hanaa Deik and Benjamin Petrick and Gerald Auer and Hideko Takayanagi and Yasufumi Iryu and Margot Courtillat and Bassetti, {Maria Angela}",
note = "Funding Information: The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) is gratefully acknowledged for providing core samples for the study. We thank three anonymous reviewers and the editor Nicholas Tosca for their detailed and helpful comments and suggestions, that improved the quality of the manuscript. The authors thank Uwe Wollenberg for his help with during SEM and EDX analysis. We acknowledge the help of Birgit Mohr with photography and image processing. SEPM is acknowledged for the permission to use parts of figures from James . ( 1999 ) for our Fig. 1 . Easy Company is gratefully acknowledged for providing the EasyCore software under Academic User License agreement. This work was supported by a grant from the German Academic Scholarship Foundation (Studienstiftung des Deutsches Volkes) awarded to Hanaa Deik. Further funding was provided by the DFG (German Science Foundation, Project 320220579) to Lars Reuning. Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. et al Funding Information: The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) is gratefully acknowledged for providing core samples for the study. We thank three anonymous reviewers and the editor Nicholas Tosca for their detailed and helpful comments and suggestions, that improved the quality of the manuscript. The authors thank Uwe Wollenberg for his help with during SEM and EDX analysis. We acknowledge the help of Birgit Mohr with photography and image processing. SEPM is acknowledged for the permission to use parts of figures from James et al. (1999) for our Fig. 1. Easy Company is gratefully acknowledged for providing the EasyCore software under Academic User License agreement. This work was supported by a grant from the German Academic Scholarship Foundation (Studienstiftung des Deutsches Volkes) awarded to Hanaa Deik. Further funding was provided by the DFG (German Science Foundation, Project 320220579) to Lars Reuning. Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Authors. Sedimentology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Association of Sedimentologists.",
year = "2022",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1111/sed.12985",
language = "English",
volume = "69",
pages = "2131--2150",
journal = "Sedimentology",
issn = "0037-0746",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",
}