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Carbonate cementation in the late glacial outwash and beach deposits in northern Estonia
- Source :
- Estonian Journal of Earth Sciences, Vol 63, Iss 1, Pp 30-44 (2014)
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Estonian Academy Publishers, 2014.
-
Abstract
- The sedimentary environments, morphology and formation of carbonate cement in the late glacial glaciofluvial outwash and beach deposits in northern Estonia are discussed. Cementation is observed in well-drained, highly porous carbonaceous debris-rich gravel and sand-forming, resistant ledges in otherwise unconsolidated sediments. The cemented units occur as laterally continuous layers or as isolated lenticular patches with thicknesses from a few centimetres to 3 m. The cement is found in two main morphologies: (1) cement crusts or coatings around detrital grains and (2) massive cement almost entirely filling interparticle pores and intraparticle voids. It is exclusively composed of low-Mg calcite with angular equant to slightly elongated rhombohedral and scalenohedral or prismatic crystals, which indicate precipitation from meteoric or connate fresh surface (glacial lake) water and/or near-surface groundwater under low to moderate supersaturation and flow conditions. The absence of organic structures within the cement suggests that cementation is essentially inorganic. The cement exhibits both meteoric vadose and phreatic features and most probably occurred close to the vadose–phreatic interface, where the conditions were transitional and/or fluctuating. Cementation has mainly taken place by CO2-degassing in response to fluctuations in groundwater level and flow conditions, controlled by the Baltic Ice Lake water level, and seasonal cold and/or dry climate conditions.
- Subjects :
- beach and outwash deposits
calcite cementation
lcsh:QE1-996.5
Geochemistry
Estonia
micromorphology
Cementation (geology)
Pleistocene
lcsh:Geology
chemistry.chemical_compound
chemistry
Outwash plain
late glacial
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Carbonate
Geomorphology
Geology
Water Science and Technology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 17367557 and 17364728
- Volume :
- 63
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Estonian Journal of Earth Sciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cd720fa1342d12e9083f2db53743c53a