Abstract
The mineral ikaite (CaCO 3 ·6H 2 O) precipitates from a mixture of spring water and seawater as tufa columns which grow at a rate of up to 50 cm per year reaching heights of up to 18 m in Ikka Fjord, SW Greenland. In the fjord, column formation occurs only at the base of a nepheline syenite‑carbonatite complex that flanks the fjord and an association has therefore been proposed. The spring water that seeps up at the bottom of the fjord is oversaturated in Na + and HCO 3 − . In this study, we show that these ions were acquired by alteration reactions in the syenite‑carbonatite complex: Na + is released during replacement of nepheline by illite and analcime in nepheline-syenite rocks and HCO 3 – is released by oxidation of siderite to goethite in carbonatite rocks. The chemically charged groundwater mixes with seawater and gives rise to the formation of the tufa columns. We performed a mass balance to show that the mass of the carbonatite in the complex is more than sufficient to provide the CO 2 needed to produce the observed mass of tufa columns. We estimated a time frame of ~600 years to produce the necessary CO 2 to form the 700 ikaite columns in the fjord.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 18-30 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
| Journal | Chemical Geology |
| Volume | 510 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 5 Apr 2019 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright: © 2019Other keywords
- Alteration
- Carbonatite
- Ikaite
- Nepheline
- Nepheline syenite
- Pseudomorphs
- Siderite
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