Abstract

Magnesium (Mg) in natural waters plays a critical role in governing carbonate mineral formation, dissolution, and diagenesis. Previous laboratory experiments show that Mg can strongly inhibit direct calcite precipitation as well as aragonite to calcite diagenetic transformation. Data from natural settings, however, suggest that diagenetic calcite in most Phanerozoic limestones has formed in the shallow marine burial realm in the presence of ample Mg. Thus, the diagenetic conditions under which aragonite-rich sediments convert to calcite-rich limestones are poorly understood. Here, we present data from laboratory experiments whereby aragonite is converted to calcite at 70°C in Mg-bearing solutions to investigate the effects of fluid:solid ratio (F:S), which varies greatly across diagenetic environments, on Mg inhibition and incorporation in calcite. Our data show that not only can the transformation of aragonite to calcite occur in solutions with higher [Mg] than previously shown possible in laboratory experiments, but that progressively lower F:S increase the rate at which aragonite stabilizes to calcite. For example, in experiments with an F:S of 0.3 mL/g, which corresponds to sediments in a closed system with 50% porosity, aragonite stabilizes to calcite in solution with [Mg] = 30 mM (Mg/Ca = 5.14) when an initial high degree of undersaturation with respect to aragonite is used and in a solution with [Mg] = 20 (Mg/Ca = 5.14) when a low degree of undersaturation is used. In contrast, aragonite does not stabilize to calcite after nearly 3000 h in experiments with an F:S of 100 mL/g, which is more typical of an open system, even in a solution with [Mg] = 5 mM (Mg/Ca = 5.14) regardless of the degree of undersaturation. Our results also show that the amount of Mg incorporated into calcite products increases linearly with the increase of F:S. Collectively, these observations further point to F:S as an important factor in carbonate diagenesis with broad implications. First, the observations that transformation of aragonite to calcite is inhibited at high [Mg] and F:S imply that calcite precipitation is unlikely to occur in marine diagenetic environments that are in direct hydrologic contact with seawater. This leaves aragonite dissolution as the dominant diagenetic process in these environments, which may represent an underrated source of alkalinity to the open ocean. Second, transformation from aragonite-rich sediments to the calcite-rich limestones that dominate the rock record is likely promoted by a decrease in the F:S and the development of a closed system during progressive burial.

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