Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation

Micro- and nano-inclusions embedded in calcite phantom crystals from Gemerská Ves, Slovak Republic, have been characterized by a combination of Raman spectroscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, X-ray powder difraction, and C and O isotope analysis. Whereas the outer, colorless part...

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Main Authors: Farsang, Stefan, Pekker, Péter, Lampronti, Giulio I., Molnár, Zsombor, Milovský, Rastislav, Pósfai, Mihály, Ozdín, Daniel, Raub, Timothy D., Redfern, Simon Anthony Turner
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163907
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-163907
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Geology
Calcite
Cap Carbonate
spellingShingle Science::Geology
Calcite
Cap Carbonate
Farsang, Stefan
Pekker, Péter
Lampronti, Giulio I.
Molnár, Zsombor
Milovský, Rastislav
Pósfai, Mihály
Ozdín, Daniel
Raub, Timothy D.
Redfern, Simon Anthony Turner
Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation
description Micro- and nano-inclusions embedded in calcite phantom crystals from Gemerská Ves, Slovak Republic, have been characterized by a combination of Raman spectroscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, X-ray powder difraction, and C and O isotope analysis. Whereas the outer, colorless part of the phantom crystal is relatively homogeneous and cavity and inclusion-free, the inner terracotta-colored part contains abundant cavities, dolomite, hematite, goethite, titanite, phyllosilicates (mainly kaolinite and illite), and apatite inclusions and nanostructures that have formed on the walls of cavities. The nanostructures comprise hematite and goethite particles sandwiched between either two phyllosilicate crystals or a phyllosilicate and a carbonate (calcite or dolomite) crystal. Our observations suggest that all inclusions in the terracotta calcite originate from the terra rossa (a common soil type in karstic areas) and limestone outcropping adjacent to the calcite crystals. While the micrometer-sized phyllosilicate and hematite particles were likely transported from the terra rossa and attached to the surface of growing calcite, the presence of phyllosilicates that are only a few atomic layers thick and of euhedral hematite, goethite, and dolomite crystals suggests that these particles precipitated along with the phantom calcite in situ, from an aqueous solution carrying terra rossa-derived and limestone-derived solutes. The compositional differences between the terra rossa (e.g., smectite as the only major Mg-rich phase) and terracotta calcite inclusions (e.g., dolomite as the only major Mg-rich phase and the presence of only Mg-free clays) hint that a smectite-illite conversion provides the Mg necessary for the precipitation of dolomite and possibly the Fe associated with the iron oxyhydroxide nanostructures. Phyllosilicate nucleation on calcite and dolomite nucleation on phyllosilicates, as inferred from nanoscale mineralogical associations, suggest that carbonates and phyllosilicates may mutually enhance nucleation and growth. This enhancement may result in the formation of large-scale clay-carbonate successions in aqueous settings, including the enigmatic, pink-colored cap dolostones succeeding late Neoproterozoic "Snowball Earth"deposits. The distribution of inclusions in the terracotta calcite and the preferred nucleation of hematite and goethite on phyllosilicate, rather than on carbonate surfaces, indicates that phyllosilicates have a potential to not only disrupt crystal growth and trigger the formation of cavities in the structure of the calcite host, but also to provide surfaces for the precipitation of different phases in the cavities and to uniformly distribute otherwise incompatible materials in a calcite host crystal. This calls for further exploration of the potential application of phyllosilicates in composite structure development.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Farsang, Stefan
Pekker, Péter
Lampronti, Giulio I.
Molnár, Zsombor
Milovský, Rastislav
Pósfai, Mihály
Ozdín, Daniel
Raub, Timothy D.
Redfern, Simon Anthony Turner
format Article
author Farsang, Stefan
Pekker, Péter
Lampronti, Giulio I.
Molnár, Zsombor
Milovský, Rastislav
Pósfai, Mihály
Ozdín, Daniel
Raub, Timothy D.
Redfern, Simon Anthony Turner
author_sort Farsang, Stefan
title Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation
title_short Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation
title_full Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation
title_fullStr Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation
title_full_unstemmed Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation
title_sort inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163907
_version_ 1753801183905972224
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1639072022-12-21T07:46:07Z Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation Farsang, Stefan Pekker, Péter Lampronti, Giulio I. Molnár, Zsombor Milovský, Rastislav Pósfai, Mihály Ozdín, Daniel Raub, Timothy D. Redfern, Simon Anthony Turner Asian School of the Environment Science::Geology Calcite Cap Carbonate Micro- and nano-inclusions embedded in calcite phantom crystals from Gemerská Ves, Slovak Republic, have been characterized by a combination of Raman spectroscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, X-ray powder difraction, and C and O isotope analysis. Whereas the outer, colorless part of the phantom crystal is relatively homogeneous and cavity and inclusion-free, the inner terracotta-colored part contains abundant cavities, dolomite, hematite, goethite, titanite, phyllosilicates (mainly kaolinite and illite), and apatite inclusions and nanostructures that have formed on the walls of cavities. The nanostructures comprise hematite and goethite particles sandwiched between either two phyllosilicate crystals or a phyllosilicate and a carbonate (calcite or dolomite) crystal. Our observations suggest that all inclusions in the terracotta calcite originate from the terra rossa (a common soil type in karstic areas) and limestone outcropping adjacent to the calcite crystals. While the micrometer-sized phyllosilicate and hematite particles were likely transported from the terra rossa and attached to the surface of growing calcite, the presence of phyllosilicates that are only a few atomic layers thick and of euhedral hematite, goethite, and dolomite crystals suggests that these particles precipitated along with the phantom calcite in situ, from an aqueous solution carrying terra rossa-derived and limestone-derived solutes. The compositional differences between the terra rossa (e.g., smectite as the only major Mg-rich phase) and terracotta calcite inclusions (e.g., dolomite as the only major Mg-rich phase and the presence of only Mg-free clays) hint that a smectite-illite conversion provides the Mg necessary for the precipitation of dolomite and possibly the Fe associated with the iron oxyhydroxide nanostructures. Phyllosilicate nucleation on calcite and dolomite nucleation on phyllosilicates, as inferred from nanoscale mineralogical associations, suggest that carbonates and phyllosilicates may mutually enhance nucleation and growth. This enhancement may result in the formation of large-scale clay-carbonate successions in aqueous settings, including the enigmatic, pink-colored cap dolostones succeeding late Neoproterozoic "Snowball Earth"deposits. The distribution of inclusions in the terracotta calcite and the preferred nucleation of hematite and goethite on phyllosilicate, rather than on carbonate surfaces, indicates that phyllosilicates have a potential to not only disrupt crystal growth and trigger the formation of cavities in the structure of the calcite host, but also to provide surfaces for the precipitation of different phases in the cavities and to uniformly distribute otherwise incompatible materials in a calcite host crystal. This calls for further exploration of the potential application of phyllosilicates in composite structure development. This work was supported by the Natural Environment Research Council (grant number NE/L002507/1) and the Slovak Research and Development Agency (grant number APVV-19-0065). TEM studies were performed at the electron microscopy laboratory of the University of Pannonia, established using grant number GINOP-2.3.3-15-2016-0009 from the European Structural and Investments Funds and the Hungarian Government. 2022-12-21T07:46:07Z 2022-12-21T07:46:07Z 2022 Journal Article Farsang, S., Pekker, P., Lampronti, G. I., Molnár, Z., Milovský, R., Pósfai, M., Ozdín, D., Raub, T. D. & Redfern, S. A. T. (2022). Inclusions in calcite phantom crystals suggest role of clay minerals in dolomite formation. American Mineralogist, 107(7), 1369-1377. https://dx.doi.org/10.2138/am-2020-7483 0003-004X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163907 10.2138/am-2020-7483 2-s2.0-85134271604 7 107 1369 1377 en American Mineralogist © 2022 Mineralogical Society of America. All rights reserved.