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Basaltic sills emplaced in organic-rich sedimentary rocks: Consequences for organic matter maturation and Cretaceous paleo-climate
Geol Survey Canada, CGC Quebec, 491 Couronne, Quebec City, PQ G1K 9A9, Canada..
Geol Survey Canada, 3303-33rd St NW, Calgary, AB T2L 2A7, Canada..
Geol Survey Canada, 3303-33rd St NW, Calgary, AB T2L 2A7, Canada..
Univ Missouri, Dept Geol Sci, Columbia, MO 65211 USA..
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2024 (English)In: Geological Society of America Bulletin, ISSN 0016-7606, E-ISSN 1943-2674, Vol. 136, no 5-6, p. 1982-2006Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Many continental large igneous provinces coincide with climate perturbations and mass extinctions. When basaltic plumbing systems traverse carbon-rich sedimentary rocks, large volumes of greenhouse gases may be generated. We document how intrusive sills of the Mesozoic High Arctic Large Igneous Province affected surrounding fine-grained, organic-rich siliciclastic rocks of the Sverdrup Basin in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Petrographic and X-ray diffraction data from samples located near sills show the presence of high-temperature metamorphic phases (diopside, andalusite, garnet, and cordierite). Raman thermometry on organic matter yields peak temperatures of 385-400 degrees C near sill contacts, tailing off to far-field temperatures of <= 230 degrees C. Samples located >20 m from sills show no systematic change in vitrinite reflectance and have a VRo eq% value of similar to 2.5%, which indicates a temperature of similar to 210 degrees C. The finite element thermal modeling tool SUTRAHEAT was applied to the 17-m-thick Hare Sill, emplaced at 3 km depth at 1105 degrees C. SUTRAHEAT results show that contact-proximal rocks attain temperatures of >700 degrees C for a brief period (similar to 1 year). By 5 years, the Hare Sill is completely solidified (<730 degrees C), and the temperature anomaly collapses rapidly thereafter as the thermal pulse propagates outward. By 10 years, all rocks within 10 m of the Hare Sill are between 450 degrees C and 400 degrees C, rocks at 20 m from the contact attain 200 degrees C, yet far-field temperatures (>50 m) have barely changed. When multiple sills are emplaced between 4 km and 6 km depth, all rocks between sills reach similar to 250 degrees C after 100 years, showing that it is possible to raise regional-scale background temperatures by similar to 150 degrees C for the observed High Arctic Large Igneous Province sill density. Vitrinite reflectance data and pyrolysis results, together with SILLi thermal modeling, indicate that much of the hydrocarbon-generating potential was eliminated by High Arctic Large Igneous Province intrusions. The SILLi model yields similar to 20 tonnes/m(2) of organic equivalent CO2 (all carbon gas is reported as CO2) from the Hare Sill alone when emplaced into Murray Harbour Formation rocks with 5.7 wt% organic carbon, and similar to 226 tonnes/m(2) by emplacement of multiple sills throughout the 2-km-thick Blaa Mountain Group with 3 wt% organic carbon. On a basin scale, this yields a total of similar to 2550 Gt CO2 from the Hare Sill, with similar to 13,000 Gt CO2 being generated by the multiple sill scenario, similar to estimates from other large igneous provinces. Much of the Blaa Mountain Group rocks now have organic carbon contents of <1 wt%, which is consistent with large volumes of carbon-species gas having been generated, likely a mixture of CO2, CH4, and other species. However, organic-rich Murray Harbour Formation rocks show no obvious reduction in organic carbon content toward the Hare Sill intrusive contacts, which suggests that not all of the carbon was lost from the sedimentary package hosting High Arctic Large Igneous Province magmas. We suggest that some of the gas generated by contact metamorphism failed to drain out for lack of high-permeability conduits, and then back-reacted to form calcite cements and pyrobitumen during cooling.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Geological Society of London, 2024. Vol. 136, no 5-6, p. 1982-2006
National Category
Geology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-533108DOI: 10.1130/B36982.1ISI: 001235971300006OAI: oai:DiVA.org:uu-533108DiVA, id: diva2:1876360
Part of project
The High Arctic Large Igneous Province: coupled ore formation and climate impact of LIPs, Swedish Research Council Earth´s past environmental crises: Large Igneous Provinces and sedimentary basins, Swedish Research Council
Funder
Swedish Research Council, 2016-04838Swedish Research Council, 2018-04933Available from: 2024-06-24 Created: 2024-06-24 Last updated: 2024-06-24Bibliographically approved

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Deegan, Frances M.Troll, Valentin R.

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