MODERN & ANCIENT METHANE CLATHRATE HYDRATE ACCUMULATIONS: A COMPARATIVE SEDIMENTOLOGY STUDY OF MESOZOIC DEPOSITS OF THE WESTERN INTERIOR SEAWAY OF NORTH AMERICA
Limestones with abundant coquinoid nymphalucinid bivalves, pellet grainstones, packstones and wackestones, and mm to cm large irregular sparry masses occur in the Teepee Buttes (TP.B.), Pierre Shale Formation (Upper Cretaceous), South Central Colorado. Sparry masses are nodular and comprise three phases of primary calcite cements that in order are high magnesium botryoidal fibrous, ferroan dendrolublinite and ferroan blocky. Botryoidal cements line the periphery of sparry masses. Fibers are directed towards the interior of the mass and have d13Cpdb ratios that range from -44.8 to -46.3 , reflecting a methanogenic source. Significantly, modern lucinids are mixotrophic opportunists as they are both pellet producing filter feeders, and chemosymbiotic with sulfate reducing bacteria that enable them to exploit zones of AMO. TP.B. nymphalucinids behaved likewise. Lastly, sparry masses are nodular and displacive, not unlike modern clathrite carbonate nodules. TP.B. limestones thus resemble clathrites and would have formed during sedimentation of the Pierre Shale Formation in response to methane clathrate hydrate accumulations in the Mesozoic Western Interior Seaway.