ORIGIN OF CARBONATE-HOSTED CELESTINE DEPOSITS OF THE FINDLAY ARCH REGION: NEW EVIDENCE FROM SOLID AND FLUID INCLUSIONS
Homogenization temperatures (Th) and last ice melting temperatures (Tm) were measured for primary and secondary inclusions in celestine. Liquid/vapor ratios of fluid inclusion assemblages in celestine were highly variable, most variability being attributed to necking down. Average Th values in celestine are estimated to lie between 60 and 90oC based on the abundance of metastable one-phase liquid inclusions. Values of Tm for fluid inclusion assemblages showed less variability. For all inclusions, values of Tm ranged from 24 to 0oC. The lowest temperature records the salinity of basinal brine, whereas higher temperatures represent various stages of dilution with meteoric water. Bladed celestine has lowest values of Tm (mean=-5.9oC) whereas prismatic celestine has higher values (mean=-1.6oC).
The following genetic model is proposed for the genesis of Findlay Arch celestine. It is similar to the model of Hanor (2004) with the addition of evidence from fluid inclusions. Downward moving meteoric water resulted in secondary porosity and karst features that provided depositional sites for celestine. Strontium was introduced from brine driven out of the Appalachian Basin during the Late Paleozoic, and sulfate from dissolution of local evaporites by meteoric water. Mixing of brine with meteoric water resulted in the precipitation of most celestine, while some formed from the replacement of evaporites.