Abstract

Quartz cement microstratigraphy and high precision in situ δ 18O values obtained by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) from μm-size quartz cement zones have been used here to determine the timing of cementation and to evaluate precipitation mechanisms within the basal sandstones of three economically significant Paleoproterozoic basins, the Athabasca and Thelon basins, Canada, and the McArthur Basin, Australia. In these examples, the earliest quartz cements have the highest δ 18O values (up to 33‰; mean = 26.0‰, V-SMOW) indicative of low temperature precipitation at depths of 0 to 1.1 km. Some paragenetically early cement phases, however, have lighter isotopic values that suggest either precipitation from isotopically depleted water or precipitation at higher temperatures. Subsequent generations of quartz cements have progressively lower δ 18O values (mean = + 16.1 ± 3‰) consistent with precipitation at higher temperatures. These data combined with petrographic observations indicate quartz cementation began in near-surface vadose and phreatic zones; the next stage of cementation is characterized by syntaxial burial cement overgrowths. Regionally and stratigraphically, well-sorted sandstone facies that were initially aquifers preferentially experienced early quartz cementation, which resulted in cement-bridged pore throats at relatively shallow depths of 0–2 km and very early in their burial history transforming these units into diagenetic aquitards. As a result, these units did not experience mineralization. Compositionally and texturally immature braided fluvial facies did not experience early addition of quartz cement, but are instead marked by minor syntaxial overgrowth cement that make up < 5% of the intergranular volume, formed at depths of 3–5 km, and were variably replaced by illite and chlorite during burial. These lithologies were still open to fluid movement at critical times in the basin when U and Pb–Zn–Ag deposits formed, and as a result experienced mineralization. Because of these relationships, the hydraulic properties of these Proterozoic sandstones would be difficult to predict based simply on their original texture.

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