Abstract

Fibrous calcite veins are ubiquitous throughout the thinly bedded, organic-rich Upper Triassic marine mdrocks of the Queen Charlotte Islands and their lateral equivalents on Vancouver Island. These veins show variable and complex morphologies and can be grouped into several types: (a) simple; (b) anastomosing or composite; (c) boxwork; and (4) polygonal network oriented normal to bedding. Field, petrographic, and geochemical evidence suggest that vein opening, resulting from hydraulic fracturing due to elevated pore-fluid pressures, was an early phenomenon and occurred prior to significant compaction of the host sediments. Calcite fibers in the veins are up to 30 mm long and commonly oriented perpendicular to the wall but locally display conical structures. Fibrous calcites, with the exception of those in boxwork veins, are generally non-ferroan and dull to very weakly orange luminescent. The boxwork calcites are ferroan, zoned and show dull luminescence with some bright rims. δ 18O values range from −8.2 to −21.6‰ (PDB) and δ 13C values range from 2.0 to −4.4‰ (PDB). Although some variations are present among the different morphological types of calcite veins, oxygen and carbon isotopic values display important variations when compared geographically. The most depleted oxygen and carbon isotopic values are those of boxwork calcite and they are associated with areas where the effects of early Mesozoic plutonism were most severe. Precipitation of boxwork fibrous calcites is interpreted to have been related to hydrothermal discharge into unconsolidated host sediment, rather than to later burial. Although the hydrothermal influence on the formation of vein calcite is related to geological events specific to the Wrangellia Terrain, this study provides an alternative mechanism for the generation of fibrous calcite veins and demonstrates the local importance of hydrothermal input in the evolution of pore-water chemistry.

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