PETROGRAPHIC AND ISOTOPIC INVESTIGATION OF DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENTS IN THE EARLY CRETACEOUS (APTIAN-ALBIAN) TLAYÚA QUARRY, MEXICO
Tlayúa Quarry deposits include foraminifera and gastropod packstones, wackestones, fenestrate wackestones and mudstones. Bird's-eye fabric and locally abundant rip-up clasts of laminated material (e.g. cyanobacterial mats) suggest deposition in tidal flat environments. Limestone layers are commonly separated by a thin residue of red clay and rarely by centimeter-scale red silty claystone, on which evidence for exposure is preserved in the form of raindrop impressions and mud cracks. Hypersaline conditions are suggested by calcite-filled gypsum molds that grew displacively within the sediments
Four trends can be distinguished in the isotopic data. Meteoric calcite lines defined by variable δ13C and invariable δ18O trends are present in numerous horizons and indicate freshwater deposition or early meteoric diagenesis. Enriched δ18O values associated with petrographic evidence of supratidal deposition indicate evaporative conditions. Many horizons show positive covariance between δ13C and δ18O indicating mixing between fresh and marine water. Calcite precipitation from tectonic fluids resulted in highly negative δ13C and δ18O values of late calcite spars, and are pervasive in some horizons.