2008 Joint Meeting of The Geological Society of America, Soil Science Society of America, American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies with the Gulf Coast Section of SEPM

Paper No. 4
Presentation Time: 8:45 AM

Oxygen Isotope Ratios of Syntaxial Quartz Overgrowths In Cambrian Sandstones, Central Wisconsin


TRZASKUS, Andrew P., KITA, Noriko T., CARROLL, Alan R., DOTT Jr, Robert H. and VALLEY, John W., Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1215 W. Dayton St, Madison, WI 53706, trzaskus@geology.wisc.edu

An ion microprobe study of oxygen isotope ratios of quartz overgrowths in Cambrian quartz arenites from central Wisconsin results in d18O values indicative of low-temperature overgrowth formation.  The samples analyzed in the study are basal Upper Cambrian sandstones from the Elk Mound Group, never buried to depths over one kilometer and composed of detrital quartz grains with authigenic quartz overgrowths.  All cements are optically continuous with the detrital quartz grains they surround.  Overgrowths present in these samples were analyzed in thin section with an ims-1280 ion microprobe using a 10 μm analysis spot.  Analytical precision of the UWQ-1 standard using the 10 μm spot averages ±0.26‰ (2SD).  The small analysis spot allows multiple analyses per overgrowth and avoids mixing of zoned samples, which cannot be avoided with bulk analytical techniques.  Results of the in-situ analysis show a bimodal distribution for overgrowth data; sample 07WI-1 from Wood County has an average d18O value of 20.3±2.4‰ (n=33, 2SD) while samples 07WI-2 from Lincoln County and 07WI-4 from Marathon County have average d18O values of 31.1±4.2‰ (n=23, 2SD) and 31.0±3.1‰ (n=38, 2SD), respectively.  Detrital cores of sandstone grains in all samples have an average d18O of 10.4±4.1‰ (n=29, 2SD).

The overgrowths exhibit complex concentric zonation under cathodoluminescence; however, each sample is homogeneous and shows no systematic change in d18O across growth bands.  Sample 07WI-1 exhibits oxygen isotope ratios lower than previous ion microprobe studies of Lower Paleozoic sandstones in Wisconsin (Kelly et al. 2007 GCA).  Samples 07WI-2 and 07WI-4 occur further north on the Wisconsin Dome.  The higher d18O in these samples suggest overgrowth formation at temperatures lower than observed in overgrowths formed by hydrothermal activity or deep burial; these d18O values suggest overgrowths are meteoric cements.  Overgrowths in sample 07WI-1 formed at a higher temperature or from lower d18O water.