Jewell, Paul W. (2000): Bedded barite in the geologic record. Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM), Tulsa, OK, United States, In: Glenn, Craig R. (editor), Prevot-Lucas, Liliane (editor), Lucas, Jacques (editor), Marine authigenesis; from global to microbial, 66, 147-161, georefid:2000-066280

Abstract:
Barite occurs throughout the geologic record as massive beds, laminations, rosettes, and nodules. The most important scientific and economic occurrences of barite are stratabound and stratiform massive beds from the Early Archean and the Early to Middle Paleozoic. Paleozoic bedded barites are by far the most volumetrically significant deposits in the geologic record. Additional occurrences have been documented in some Middle Proterozoic, Late Proterozoic, and Mesozoic rocks and in several localities on the modern ocean floor. Bedded barite is believed to have formed as emanations from seafloor sediments, as diagenetic replacements of preexisting minerals, or as direct precipitants due to biological fixation of barium in the water column. Direct field evidence to differentiate between these theories is often lacking or contradictory. Geochemical studies, particularly those that have employed delta (super 34) S and (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr analyses of the barite, have proven very useful in understanding bedded barite genesis. The low solubility of barite relative to other natural salts has helped barite survive as a pseudomorph of stratiform evaporite minerals in some Archean sedimentary sequences. Other examples of Archean barite appear to have a shallow water detrital or authigenic origin. Very low delta (super 34) S values of Archean barite are interpreted as indicating a low-sulfate ocean. Large deposits of Paleozoic bedded barite are typically found in fine-grained, organic-rich siliciclastic sequences and are associated with massive and disseminated sulfides, cherts, phosphorites, and less frequently limestones and volcanic rocks. delta (super 34) S analyses indicate that almost all bedded barite had a seawater sulfate source. The genetic link between Paleozoic bedded barites and sedimentary submarine exhalative Pb-Zn sulfide deposits has been established by field and geochemical study of deposits in western Canada and western Europe. (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr analyses suggest that these bedded barites have a continental barium source. Economically important bedded barites in China, Arkansas, and Nevada have no significant sulfides or other hydrothermal manifestations. The clear association of dissolved barium and barite with biological cycles in the modern ocean, associations with phosphorites and cherts, and (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr analyses that are comparable to contemporaneous seawater suggest that the Chinese, Nevada, and Arkansas barite deposits formed as biological precipitates on the seafloor. Bedded barite formed by this mechanism holds promise as an indicator of high paleoproductivity and open ocean sulfate reduction during selected periods of the Paleozoic. The lack of world class examples of bedded barite in Mesozoic and Cenozoic black shale sequences indicates a lack of open ocean sulfate reduction during these periods of geologic time.
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Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=2000-066280 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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