Anomalous geochemical signals from phosphatic Middle Cambrian rocks in the southern Georgina Basin, Australia
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Sedimentology
- Vol. 35 (4) , 549-570
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3091.1988.tb01235.x
Abstract
Middle Cambrian rocks of the Georgina Basin contain both phosphatic and organic‐rich sediments, the former often occurring as commercially viable phosphate deposits, and the latter as minor oil shale occurrences. Both kinds of rocks occur in the Hay River Formation penetrated by Bureau of Mineral Resources (BMR) stratigraphic corehole Tobermory 14. Detailed sampling and analysis of this core has been undertaken to assess the chemostratigraphy of the Hay River Formation; to examine the possible use, as a palaeoceanographic tool, of changes in δ13C values of carbonates and kerogens; and to gain an understanding of phosphate deposition in this part of the basin.The Upper Hay River Formation was deposited in a normal marine environment characterized by oxic bottom conditions. It contains several episodes of significant trace metal enrichment which appear to indicate periodic replacement of the water body. The Lower Hay River Formation, however, was deposited in an abnormal marine environment low in sulphate and Mo and enriched in P. Its carbonate phase has positive δ13C values 1–1.5%0 enriched over the accepted Cambrian marine carbonate value of ‐0.57 ± 0.17%0. The very low sulphate concentration, Mo‐depletion and spiking of carbonate δ18O values suggests there was an influx of deeper ocean water of sufficient volume to maintain prolonged stable anoxic bottom waters. These data support a previous suggestion that phosphogenesis in the Georgina Basin was related to ‘Oceanic Anoxic Events'.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Carbon, oxygen and sulphur isotope variations in concretions from the Upper Lias of N.E. EnglandPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The paleoenvironment of anaerobic sediments in the Late Mesozoic South Atlantic OceanPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- A model for the development of phosphatic and calcareous lithofacies in the Middle Cambrian Thorntonia Limestone, northeast Georgina Basin, AustraliaAustralian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1988
- Secular variation in carbon isotope ratios from Upper Proterozoic successions of Svalbard and East GreenlandNature, 1986
- DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENTS AND SOURCE ROCK POTENTIAL OF THE JURASSIC KIDOD SHALES, ISRAELJournal of Petroleum Geology, 1985
- Phosphorus, phosphorites and skeletal evolution at the Precambrian—Cambrian boundaryNature, 1984
- Cambrian skeletal halite crystals and experimental analoguesSedimentology, 1982
- Cretaceous anoxic events: from continents to oceansJournal of the Geological Society, 1980
- The microbiological formation of carbonate concretions in the Upper Lias of NE EnglandChemical Geology, 1976
- THE GROWTH OF CAMBRIAN AND LIASSIC CONCRETIONSSedimentology, 1971