Origin and significance of ultra-slow calcite dissolution rates in deep sea sediments

Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta(2023)

引用 0|浏览16
暂无评分
摘要
Prediction of mineral-fluid reaction rates in geologic materials is subject to large uncertainties even though the rates are critical for many applications, from studies of past climate change to the engineering of carbon removal and storage. Deep sea carbonate sediments, which have been extensively cored and characterized at dozens of sites by ocean drilling programs, provide unique opportunities to examine how minerals and fluids react over multi-million-year timescales in natural conditions at low temperature. It has already been established that the calcite-fluid reaction in these systems is extremely slow, but the explanation for the ultra-slow rates, and the fact that non-zero rates persist for tens of millions of years, remains elusive. We extend the analysis of pore fluid Sr and Ca concentration data in the literature from ocean drilling archives to 21 drill sites in sediment sections where the fraction of carbonate is larger than 80% to systematically estimate the rates at which calcite dissolves and precipitates as a function of depth and sediment age. Pore fluid Sr/Ca used in this study, and Sr and Ca isotopes in other published analyses, provide estimates of the gross calcite dissolution rates, which are mostly balanced by secondary calcite precipitation. Pore fluid Ca concentration data provide key, previously under -appreciated, information on the net calcite dissolution rates. Using these data we evaluate simple models for calcite reaction kinetics and pore fluid sediment evolution and conclude that (1) reaction rates are extremely slow because the reactive site density of the bulk sediment decreases continuously and systematically approxi-mately as age -1, and (2) reaction persists to hundreds of meters burial depth and tens of millions of years because pore fluids never become closed due to diffusive communication with the oceans, and hence remain slightly undersaturated with respect to calcite. The systematic decrease in bulk reactive site density begins immediately upon deposition, greatly slowing the rate of dissolution and hence affecting models of calcite dissolution on the seafloor. The failure to reach equilibrium after millions of years and hundreds of meters of burial, is a conse-quence of extremely slow net reaction rates that cannot drive the pore fluids to equilibrium against the diffusive loss of Ca and DIC to the ocean. The existence of two or more calcite phases of different solubility is a likely source of a long-lived, but small, driving force for reaction, but its effect decreases with continued recrystalli-zation and pore fluid evolution.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Deep sea carbonate sediment,Calcite dissolution rate,Pore fluid chemistry
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要