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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)
Abstract
DOI: 10.2110/jsr.2021.016
Fluid
-inclusion petrography in calcite stalagmites: Implications for entrapment processes
Abstract
Fluids trapped in speleothems have an enormous potential in frontier fields of paleoclimate and paleohydrological research. This potential is, however, hampered by diverse scientific and technical limitations, among which the lack of a systematic methodology for genetically characterizing
fluid
inclusions is a major one, as these can have different origins, and thus, the trapped
fluid
(usually water), different meanings. In this work, we propose a systematic petrological classification of
fluid
inclusions, based on: 1) the temporal relation between
fluid
inclusions and the host calcite, 2) the spatial relation between
fluid
inclusions and the “crystallites” and crystals aggregates, and 3) the phases (water, air) trapped inside
fluid
inclusions. The first criterion allows dividing
fluid
inclusions in two main categories: primary and secondary, whose identification is critical in any research based on trapped fluids. The other two criteria allow the definition of eight types of primary and four types of secondary
fluid
inclusions.
Primary
fluid
inclusions contain the drip water that fed stalagmites at the time of crystal growth, and can be intercrystalline, i.e., located between adjacent crystallites, or intracrystalline, i.e., with the
fluid
trapped within crystallites. We differentiate six main types among the intercrystalline
fluid
inclusions (elongate, thorn-shaped, down-arrow, interbranch, macro-elongate, and bucket) and other two among intracrystalline inclusions (pyriform and boudin). In primary inclusions, water is the main phase, while gas is much less abundant. The presence of gas could be related to slow drip rates or degassing in the cave, but also to later leakage due to changes in temperature and humidity often occurring during inadequate handling of speleothem samples.
Secondary
fluid
inclusions were clearly related to younger water inlet through stratigraphic disruptions or unconformities. They are formed after water infiltration, but sealed before the renewed crystal growth. We differentiate four main types of secondary inclusions: interconnected, rounded, triangular, and vertical
fluid
inclusions. The identification of primary and secondary
fluid
inclusions in speleothems is a key for interpretation in paleoclimate studies.
Integration of petrological results allow establishment of three different genetic scenarios for the formation of
fluid
inclusions, whose identification can be relevant because of their predictive character.
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