Abstract
ABSTRACTPhanerozoic limestones are composed of low-Mg calcite microcrystals (i.e., micrite) that typically measure between 1 and 9 μm in diameter. These microcrystals, which host most of the microporosity in subsurface reservoirs, are characterized by a variety of microtextures. Despite the overwhelming consensus that calcite microcrystals are diagenetic, the origin of the various textures is widely debated. The most commonly reported texture is characterized by polyhedral and rounded calcite microcrystals, which are interpreted to form via partial dissolution of rhombic microcrystals during burial diagenesis. A proposed implication of this model is that dissolution during burial is responsible for significant porosity generation. This claim has been previously criticized based on mass-balance considerations and geochemical constrains. To explicitly test the dissolution model, a series of laboratory experiments were conducted whereby various types of calcites composed of rhombic and polyhedral microcrystals were partially dissolved under a constant degree of undersaturation, both near and far-from-equilibrium.Our results indicate that calcite crystals dissolved under far-from-equilibrium conditions develop rounded edges and corners, inter-crystal gulfs (narrow grooves or channels between adjacent crystals), and a few etch pits on crystal faces—observations consistent with the burial-dissolution hypothesis. Crystals dissolved under near-equilibrium conditions, in contrast, retain sharp edges and corners and develop ledges and pits—suggesting that dissolution occurs more selectively at high-energy sites. These observations support the longstanding understanding that far-from-equilibrium dissolution is transport-controlled, and near-equilibrium dissolution is surface-controlled. Our results also show that while the rhombic calcite crystals may develop rounded edges and corners when dissolved under far-from-equilibrium conditions the crystals themselves do not become spherical. By contrast, polyhedral crystals not only develop rounded edges and corners when dissolved under far-from-equilibrium conditions but become nearly spherical with continued dissolution. Collectively, these observations suggest that rounded calcite microcrystals more likely form from a precursor exhibiting an equant polyhedral texture, rather than from a euhedral rhombic precursor as previously proposed. Lastly, the observation that calcite crystals developed rounded edges and corners and inter-crystal gulfs after only 5% dissolution indicates that the presence of such features in natural limestones need not imply that significant porosity generation has occurred.
Highlights
Phanerozoic limestones globally are characterized by low-Mg calcite microcrystals that typically range in diameter between 1 and 9 lm that comprise both carbonate matrix and allochems (Moshier 1989; Kaczmarek et al 2015)
Experimental studies have consistently shown that aragonite stabilizes to calcite microcrystals that are remarkably similar in size and shape to those observed in natural limestones (e.g., McManus and Rimstidt 1982; Papenguth 1991; Hashim and Kaczmarek 2020)
It has previously been demonstrated that when dissolution occurs under high degrees of undersaturation, ion detachment is likely to be faster than ion transport, and dissolution is expected to be transport-controlled, whereas when dissolution occurs under low degrees of undersaturation, ion detachment is likely to be slower than ion transport, and dissolution is expected to be surface-controlled (Berner 1980; Sjoberg and Rickard 1983; Morse and Arvidson 2002)
Summary
Phanerozoic limestones globally are characterized by low-Mg calcite (calcite) microcrystals that typically range in diameter between 1 and 9 lm that comprise both carbonate matrix and allochems (Moshier 1989; Kaczmarek et al 2015). Calcite microcrystals have been classified according to various textural classes based on crystal shape, size, and contact geometry (e.g., Moshier 1989; Deville de Periere et al 2011; Kaczmarek et al 2015). Geochemical data (Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, d13C, and d18O) from a global collection of Phanerozoic limestones suggest that most
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