Hg. Machel et Ea. Burton, GOLDEN GROVE DOLOMITE, BARBADOS - ORIGIN FROM MODIFIED SEAWATER, Journal of sedimentary research. Section A, Sedimentary petrology and processes, 64(4), 1994, pp. 741-751
The largest dolomite occurrence on Barbados, part of a roadcut at Gold
en Grove, is about 40 m long and 0.5-2.5 m thick. Dolomite at Golden G
rove constitutes about 10-40 vol % of the host limestone, an algal-for
aminiferal facies of Late Pleistocene age, with local patches consisti
ng of up to 100 vol % dolomite. Almost all dolomite is a replacement o
f matrix and predominantly Mg-calcite skeletal grains. An average of l
ess than 0.1 vol % of the rock is fibrous to bladed, radial and radiax
ial dolomite cements with calcite banding. The partially dolomitized a
lgal-foraminiferal facies is unconformably overlain by scleractinian c
oral reef limestones. Replacive dolomitization appears to have been ve
ry localized at the stratigraphic level of Golden Grove. The petrograp
hic data suggest that replacive dolomitization took place after deposi
tion of the algal-foraminiferal facies and prior to deposition of the
overlying coral reef facies. delta(18)O (+1.1 to +4.4 parts per thousa
nd PDB) values of the replacive dolomites suggest seawater with variab
le temperature and/or slight degrees of evaporation as the principal a
gent of dolomitization. In addition, variable and highly negative delt
a(13)C values of the replacive dolomites (-23.5 to -8.9 parts per thou
sand PDB) reflect mixing of normal marine carbon with a carbon reservo
ir strongly depleted in C-13. The main source of this C-13-depleted ca
rbonate probably was oxidized methane, with a possible but very minor
contribution of carbonate derived from bacterial sulfate reduction. Me
thane may have been supplied by bacterial methanogenesis relatively cl
ose to the site of dolomitization or by upward seepage of thermogenic
methane derived from underlying Tertiary hydrocarbon reservoir(s). It
is possible, albeit speculative, that the localized availability of me
thane (via fractures?) and/or its localized oxidation somehow induced
dolomitization at Golden Grove. Furthermore, the delta(13)C, delta(18)
O and Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios (0.70913-0.70919) of replacive dolomites, of
Golden Grove calcites (delta(13)C = -14.0 to -3.9 parts per thousand P
DB; delta(18)O = -5.0 to -2.2 parts per thousand PDB), and of groundwa
ters from the present coastal mixing zone and inland carbonate aquifer
s (Sr-87/Sr-86 = 0.70911-0.70924; delta(13)C = -12.8 to -5.9 parts per
thousand PDB; delta(18)O = -5.0 to -1.2 parts per thousand SMOW) effe
ctively rule out that replacive dolomitization at Golden Grove was cau
sed in a typical coastal freshwater-seawater mixing zone or that dolom
itization was influenced by meteoric waters to any significant degree.
The small amounts of banded dolomite cements, however, may have forme
d in a typical coastal mixing zone.