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Genetic link between Miocene seafloor methane seep limestones and underlying carbonate conduit concretions at Rocky Knob, Gisborne, New Zealand

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Version 2 2019-09-05, 03:21
Version 1 2019-01-30, 08:21
journal contribution
posted on 2019-09-05, 03:21 authored by Campbell S. Nelson, Kathleen A. Campbell, Stephanie L. Nyman, Jens Greinert, David A. Francis, Steven D. Hood

Methane-derived authigenic carbonates (MDACs) in Miocene bathyal mudstones in North Island, New Zealand are typically expressed as either sub-seafloor conduit concretions or as seafloor seep limestones, but rarely are both types exposed in outcrop at one locality. Consequently, any potential genetic link between them is usually inferred. This also appears to be the case for global occurrences of MDAC. At the Rocky Knob seep complex near Gisborne both seep limestones and conduit concretions co-occur. The petrography and stable carbon (δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) isotope compositions of their various authigenic carbonate components (automicrite, fibrous aragonite crystals, and granular, blocky and bladed calcite crystals) show that distinctive isotope and petrographic groupings for precipitates within the conduit concretions match or “correlate” with several of those in the seep limestones. This corroborates their genetic tie and derivation from the same fluids, albeit in different parts (i.e. sub-seafloor vs. seafloor) of the seep complex.

Funding

Financial support for the study came from the Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund to University of Auckland [grant number 06-UOA-082] and University of Waikato (V083). During his stay in New Zealand JG received financial aid via a Marie Curie Outgoing International Fellowship stipend (EU-FP6) [grant number MOIF CT-2005-007436].

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