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00:03 Yes. Okay. So this map the world shows you the distribution of

00:10 warm water carbonate. So in these are the famous areas of modern

00:15 marine carbonate deposition. So you can areas around florida, The Bahamas off

00:20 yucatan lack of of police in you can see the the area in

00:28 Arabian gulf. All right. That setting for modern carbonate ramp deposition.

00:34 then of course Southeast Asia and along equator. You see lots of black

00:38 . Those are reefs. And the Asia is famous for its uh shell

00:43 carbonate platforms with reef deposition. And uh and then you can see

00:49 Australia on the north, northwest sorry. And the northeast side,

00:57 can see that on the northeast side a great barrier reef. And then

00:59 the northwest side there's also shallow water deposition. So, what's the common

01:04 here? Well, the red areas define our tropical subtropical belt from the

01:11 north to about 30 degrees and from equator south to 30 degrees. And

01:15 do we get carbonate deposition in these ? We get it because the water

01:19 warm is supersaturated with respect to calcium . It's free of most solicit plastic

01:26 . Okay. And that's why you good you have clear water, warm

01:32 and those are some of the key for shallow marine carbonate deposition.

01:37 And then you'll notice there. The shows cool water carbonate deposition here

01:42 And most of the famous cool water deposits are Uh north or south of

01:49 latitude. And the famous areas are of New Zealand and Australia, but

01:55 notice that some areas off of Western for example, that are in the

01:59 belt or subtropical belt. And the for that is because of up welling

02:04 the leeward sides of these continents where wind blows offshore, you get up

02:08 into the marine water, you get water upwelling along that margin and that's

02:12 you can get some carbonate deposition associated cooler water even though you're in a

02:18 or subtropical setting. But uh I'm gonna downplay the cold water carbonate

02:24 for this segment because in the rock unless you unless you prospect in New

02:30 you're not going to find oil and deposits in these so called cool water

02:34 . Alright, all right. And the third part of the story is

02:41 notice the dark green on this map this is not labelled here. Uh

02:48 labeled with the era of the Black . These are the global Torino uses

02:53 arena is a plastic foraminifera that lives the upper part of the water

02:57 but out in deep water and when dies it contributes to the sediment to

03:03 this huge apology carbonate material. This the precursor to the famous chalk deposits

03:09 the north sea chalks or the Austin or Eagle furred here in texas.

03:14 uh so that's where these accumulate, don't accumulate in shallow water, they

03:20 in these deeper water basins. But at the distribution of the dark

03:24 It's very patchy in distribution. And reason for that has to do with

03:28 saturation state of the ocean and the of the ocean basins. So,

03:33 see a lot of dark green and indian ocean and north and southern part

03:37 the atlantic oceans in the southern But look at the northern pacific

03:42 You don't see a lot of yellow . The yellow means it is devoid

03:46 these pelagic uses. All right. not that the organisms don't live

03:50 They do live there, but when settle down into the water column,

03:54 dissolve out before they ever reached the . And so I'm sure most of

03:58 , as an undergraduate heard of the compensation deputy reaganite compensation depth. That's

04:04 depth below which all the reaganite or dissolves out and it's relatively shallow in

04:11 atlantic. I'm sorry. In the uh it's uh and uh it's controlled

04:18 by how much carbon production you have the water column, but also the

04:22 of the water because the colder the , the easier it is to dissolve

04:26 carbonate as it settles out. And the saturation state is controlled by river

04:31 bringing in dissolved carbonate material. So you just don't have a lot of

04:36 river systems feeding into the northern pacific . And that's why you don't get

04:40 lot of pelagic carbonate is preserved. right. So that's the last I'm

04:46 to talk about the Iraq tonight or compensation depth because again, most of

04:51 expiration are in basins that are too where this phenomenon would come into

04:56 Right? So, uh the now been using the term shallow water and

05:03 water. So let me define what mean by shallow water To a carbon

05:07 geologist. It generally means water depths than 10 m. Deedee.

05:14 And it reflects the relationship shown by cartoon here you see on the left

05:19 total carbonate production in blue. Look high it is when your water depths

05:25 than 10 m. And then there's dramatic drop off at about 10

05:30 And what does that reflect? it reflects two things. It reflects

05:33 fact that as you deepen the light decreases. Most of the organisms that

05:39 these skeletal components require light for So as you diminish light penetration,

05:46 carbonate productivity decreases. And then what's other thing that happens? The water

05:51 colder? Obviously, as you go in cold water again, works against

05:56 to precipitate carbonate into a skeleton or sediment. Things like that. So

06:02 why we use 10 m is sort the rough cut off between shallow water

06:07 relatively deep water. Okay. And . Including the car. Yes.

06:18 the virus. Hello, the Sure. I can tell you

06:24 Cooperative congress can't from golden after it accumulate below the cal cider or reaganite

06:33 depth. That's the depth below which the carbonate is gone. That can

06:40 . You could be in a situation some of it dissolves but it's still

06:44 on the sea floor. You just reached that calcite compensation depth or reaganite

06:49 depth. Okay. Yeah. It's as the depth below which everything is

06:57 . Everything is dissolved out nothing Which is not uncommon today because our

07:04 are really deep. But in the record, most of our basins do

07:08 explore for? We're not that So usually wouldn't come into play

07:14 Okay. So we'll talk about later . We'll talk about the way we

07:19 the sediment in shallow marine settings. the breakdown of the skeletal hard parts

07:25 organisms live on the sea floor or other organic or inorganic processes that create

07:30 sediment that accumulates in shallow water. so one of the things that I'm

07:38 hopefully give you an appreciation for with discussion next weekend when we get into

07:42 carbonate environments is that uh, many these carbonate environments have the potential to

07:51 a great volume of sediment forgiven unit time. And that's what this diagram

07:57 trying to show here. So the bars that you see here, our

08:02 of sedimentation, you can see one per 1000 years or 10 m per

08:06 years. You see tidal flats, lights, reefs, and, and

08:12 that are associated with the reefs. it's really important to appreciate this for

08:17 reasons. First of all, most these sediments are accumulating in the same

08:21 which they initially formed. Okay, unlike classics, we don't erode from

08:26 environment re deposit somewhere else. We do that, but it's not as

08:30 as just being in an environment and producing and preserving the sediment in that

08:36 . Okay. And what that means that, sorry? What that means

08:43 that uh, you compare these rates sedimentation as you can see how they

08:47 outpaced long term subsidence. So that they're gonna do what through time,

08:52 gonna shallow up. Right. We about carbonate systems showing up through

08:56 And that's because of this relationship And even some of these carbonates systems

09:01 outpace are rising sea levels that we during different geological time periods. And

09:10 they can easily outpaced these rising sea , which again allows them to shallow

09:14 or to even build up above sea to make an island or or something

09:19 that. Okay, so when you back to the rock record and you

09:22 at these ancient platform systems and we're to talk about the bomb a platform

09:28 later in this segment, the bahama complex started to develop arguably during the

09:35 Jurassic, but certainly in the early and it's now 5 to 6 kilometer

09:40 package of shallow marine carbonate deposits So, when you see that,

09:46 really not hard to appreciate why that because of the high rates of sedimentation

09:52 , whether a number of these environments make up these carbonate platforms.

09:57 and that really should be the takeaway for from this, from this

10:04 Okay, so let's talk about the , distinctive aspects that differentiate carbonate rocks

10:09 solicit plastic deposits. The first is basil origin. The second is this

10:15 dependence on organic activity. The 3rd is this high susceptibility to post oppositional

10:22 . And then the last part is complex poor geometry that often comes along

10:27 the dye genesis of these carbonates compared a simple sandstone system. Okay,

10:34 let me take each of these points break them down a little bit more

10:37 and everything that I talk about in lecture, I will repeat again in

10:42 detail when we get into more just focused discussions about these different aspects of

10:49 or die genesis. Okay, so do we mean by inter basin

10:54 We mean that most carbonate sediments are at, We're close to the point

10:58 final deposition. Okay, They're going be sensitive to what we call fizzy

11:03 setting, Sea level change and the and chemical processes that operate in that

11:09 of deposition. And I'll let me fizz a graphic setting. That's a

11:15 region that is influenced by both global local effects. And uh let me

11:24 it at that for right now because gonna come back and explain that much

11:26 detail later. But but there is global aspect of fizzy graphic setting,

11:31 is where did you sit relative to equator. Right. That controls whether

11:35 tropical, subtropical or temperate and then a local control and that's the bottom

11:42 that ties back to the two in models that I just mentioned, the

11:46 margin platform versus the carbonate ramp. . And then you're going to see

11:53 these carbonates not only control their own environment that they modify. They strongly

11:58 their neighboring environments. In the classical , that as a carbonate reefs,

12:03 reef is building up like this as builds up as it shallows up the

12:07 character, the reef changes because the change responding to changes in water depth

12:12 energy. But as it shallows up sea level, it modifies circulation behind

12:17 in the back briefly again. So this process response response. No process

12:24 feedback mechanism that comes into play when talking about some of these carbonate

12:29 Okay. And you get that you that, I think to some degree

12:33 classics, to write a barrier island an effect obviously on the back barrier

12:38 . Right? As it builds up this builds up to sea level.

12:42 , so to drive this relationship we have the simple cartoon here that

12:47 a shallow water carbonate platform That we've now as being less than 10 m

12:52 water depth, dropping off into a deeper basin. And I have not

13:00 the term basin because there is no definition of a carbonate basin. There's

13:04 specific water depth that we put onto . All right, so, you're

13:09 see some carbonate basins are like we today in the Caribbean where there are

13:13 m deep. Other basins, like going to show you from the Arabian

13:17 , 80 m Steve. So, a relative term. Okay, and

13:21 how we use it in carbonates. , we're talking about a carbon base

13:25 we're not talking about gulf of Mexico depths where you're talking about thousands of

13:29 of water. Okay, And when look at your shallow water carbonate

13:34 you look at the top of this all along the top of the

13:37 In shallow water, you're producing different of carbonate sediment based on the influence

13:43 water depth and circulation of seawater salinity alkalinity and things like that. And

13:50 of these sediments are accumulating essentially the environment which they initially formed. So

13:55 the concept of inter basin origin. , that doesn't mean you can't move

14:01 from one area to another, you do that by major storms or hurricanes

14:04 typhoons. All right, so a storm or hurricane can take material from

14:09 shallow subtitle and throw it up on adjacent land mass. That's how we

14:14 a carbonate titles. Lab. We really should call the storm

14:19 but in the literature we call them flats. Tidal currents usually don't have

14:23 to do with deposition. It's the deposition that brings the sediment from A

14:29 feet or five ft of water and that sentiment up on the adjacent land

14:33 . Okay, sometimes it goes the way the storm pushes material from shallow

14:39 off into deeper water. So in , we will get deep water

14:43 liked urbanites, debris flows, grain . Okay. Like you're doing

14:49 but mostly most of the time it's a bomb a sequence or anything like

14:54 . It is just a simple grain or debris flows. That oftentimes just

15:00 one on top of the other sometimes create greater thicknesses. Okay, All

15:05 . So in the literature, people about carbonates being born not made.

15:10 basically what they're saying is carbonates have central basin origin. They basically accumulating

15:16 same setting where they initially formed, is good because that means we can

15:21 at the attributes of the sediments and out something about the deposition environment and

15:26 to extend the trend when we're trying map trends in the subsurface,

15:30 Yeah. Alright. To illustrate that a photograph taken from one of the

15:37 shuttle flights um looking down on the eastern portion of the great bahama Bank

15:46 . So mentally you have to look the left 150 km. That's where

15:51 city of Miami would be. so we're about 27, north of

15:56 equator when a subtropical setting. And can see in this photograph the lighter

16:03 colored water. This is the shallow carbonate platform area. Where are we

16:09 shallow water carbonate deposition? The black that you see here that runs sort

16:15 north to south is an older Pleistocene called the Luther island. And the

16:21 is built up to about 200 ft present a sea level. It formed

16:26 during a different sea level stand. was five day m higher Than it

16:31 today, back about 120,000 years Okay. And then sea level dropped

16:37 everything got exposed to verily to be into the present day limestone. And

16:44 you see the darker blue surrounding this Where the 20 km bar is.

16:49 called Exuma Sound. That's a deep and payment that cuts into the

16:53 It's 2000 m deep in the axis that in payment. Okay. And

16:59 off to the right is the open ocean and it's even deeper as 4000

17:05 just a couple of miles off of island to the right. Okay,

17:11 just look at the area here that outlining with my pointer, you can

17:15 changes in the color of the sediments the sea floor, right along the

17:19 margin. Here is one style of . And then what do you see

17:23 , a long linear belt of this material. This turns out to be

17:28 energy bulajic sand deposition driven by strong current agitation. And then when the

17:34 currents weighing you stop making the woods you transform into a quieter water,

17:41 muddy carbonate environment. Further inboard on platform. Okay, so you can

17:46 this out which is what I did my master's thesis many, many moons

17:51 . And you can see this pattern here. A type of coral and

17:58 Calgary's algae contributing sediment along the margin , it's not a reef.

18:06 It's a rocky bottom with scattered coral algal growth producing the thin veneer of

18:11 sediment. So we typically call this sand and then behind it and yellow

18:15 black is the you allergic sand belt then a changed orange and green reflects

18:20 low energy, slightly deeper water setting the sand body system. Uh The

18:26 should be uh talented fecal pellets created burrowing organisms right with a muddy

18:34 but more fecal pellets than mud. it's a what we call a political

18:40 . And then the green would be polluted line muds that occur in the

18:43 restricted part. Okay, so what happening here, we're changing the environmental

18:50 as we move from the high energy margin to the low energy platform

18:55 And we see these belts of deposition correspondent lee and you see how they

19:00 up parallel to the platform margin. . In the bulk of the sediments

19:04 each of these environments stays fixed in in those particular deposition environments. That's

19:10 concept of international origin. All right , it doesn't mean you can't move

19:15 from the top of the Luther bank say Exuma sound. You can do

19:21 Back in the mid 1980s. UU group from the University of Miami went

19:26 to Exuma Sound and they dropped these piston cores into the basin. They

19:32 these piston cores into 2000 m of and they penetrated through the whole scene

19:37 the upper part of the unconsolidated And what do they recover?

19:42 they recovered mostly deep water, pelagic deposition related to global giants.

19:47 That's because that's where they live. sometimes they would encounter a few inches

19:53 maybe half a foot of bulajic Well, you'll exam doesn't form in

19:58 m of water. Right. Wood wood stands for him in shallow

20:03 persistently agitated shallow water. And so implication is that periodically storm shed?

20:09 is from these platforms into that deeper setting. Okay. But the bulk

20:14 this material up on the platform stays in place. That's the concept of

20:19 origin. Okay, the second point this high dependence on organic activity.

20:29 you've all looked at, I'm sure samples as part of your undergraduate training

20:35 most lines phones are made up of recognisable remains of the skeletal hard parts

20:40 these organisms. Right? And the the pieces, the easier it is

20:43 recognize what contributed that material. But course the stuff can be broken down

20:49 the sea floor, uh by crunchers stingrays and sharks in the finer grained

20:56 , or can be broken down by activity on the sea floor in the

21:00 grade material. And so it's always the rock record of challenge, trying

21:04 recognize some of the smaller scale fragments where they come from. Right.

21:09 you do see the recognizable organic remains these organisms that contribute to the

21:15 The second point was that the little parallel bio faces. You just saw

21:19 illustrating the previous map. Right? little faces, Those belts of different

21:24 of deposition parallel the margin because the contributing to those environments. Also paralleled

21:32 distribution parallel the platform margin. All , and then you're going to learn

21:36 the next lecture. The grain formation is often related to organic activity.

21:42 reworking is very common in carbonates, as it is in some solicit plastic

21:48 . And then the diabetic patterns that see in carbonates often reflect the mineralogy

21:54 the constituents that contributed to the So, when I take you through

21:58 grain types in our next to I'm going to make you aware of

22:01 . What we think are the starting ease, Right. Are they cal

22:05 ? Are there a genetic that makes big difference in terms of the way

22:10 sediments later respond to die genesis? whether we generate any secondary porosity in

22:16 carbonates or not. Okay, so me let me take this slide and

22:22 on this in more detail. here's an underwater photograph of a modern

22:27 from the caribbean. What's the organic here? Well, it's obviously the

22:31 and make up this reef. These corals are fast growing corals that

22:36 16-18 cm a year. I the girl like weeds underwater,

22:41 All right. And they'll continue to until what until a big storm comes

22:47 and knocks them over. Right. , the big scale hurricanes will knock

22:51 reefs over. And and you'll see of this later in our discussion uh

22:56 know, in a couple of Alright. Uh So, it's pretty

23:00 in a reef. What the organic . Right? It's the it's the

23:04 and you know, not all reefs made up of wall to wall

23:08 you living coral, I don't know any of you have ever snorkeled on

23:12 modern reef or not. But you very quickly that there are a lot

23:16 open areas between where the corals grow there's a lot of sedimentation occurring in

23:21 areas that are occupied by other kinds organisms producing settlement. So when you

23:26 at any modern setting, like this from the great barrier reef in

23:32 the zone of active reef growth is the re front. So that underwater

23:36 would be associated with this part of reef on the right And it's relatively

23:42 at any one point in time. only one or 200 m across.

23:47 right. But when it gets decimated major storm activity, what do those

23:52 or typhoons do they throw this material up onto the reef? They create

23:57 wide rubble flat that we call the flat. That can be 10-20 times

24:03 than the reef front. Okay. when you if you were to go

24:08 at some of these deposits in the , you would see the re flat

24:13 made up of the coarser grain. recognisable fragments of the corals, but

24:18 lot of the coral materials broken down an even finer scale sand material like

24:24 see uh just north of my foot . All right. All right.

24:30 then the reef system is pretty obvious the organic influences. But you go

24:34 other carbon environments. And here's a underwater. Looking down on the sea

24:40 . This is c egress. And seagrass is not unique to the

24:45 sea grasses go all the way back the lower cretaceous. All right.

24:50 been able to document sea grasses yet the paleozoic, but certainly common all

24:55 the Mesozoic and tertiary. And so the role? What's the subtle role

25:01 seagrass? Well, first thing cigarettes is it is a baffler.

25:06 It grows these light obviously and it on the sea floor and it traps

25:11 suspended material, putting a suspension by storms or the occasional hurricane. So

25:17 actually can build topography through time. can actually build what we call mounds

25:23 on the sea floor and that actually of these mountains turned out to be

25:28 in the rock record. All And then the second thing is it

25:32 an effective route network. And so that's accumulated in the setting is going

25:37 be better preserved because it's very difficult erode these sea grass banks.

25:42 Once they take place very, very to ride them, It takes base

25:47 a category four or 5 hurricane to them up. Okay. And then

25:52 the third important important influence of It's a substrate for other carbonate

25:59 Okay. And if you look at you look at the sea grass blades

26:03 close, you see all kinds of on the sea grass. You see

26:09 crusty looking material here that has sort a light pink color. That's actually

26:14 in crusty in red algae. That's carbonate related material. All

26:19 so, that's living on the grass . Then, you see these little

26:24 features here. Those are little cal worm tubes. So, it's a

26:29 that secretes a little worm like It lives in. It filter

26:33 but it attaches to the grass And then you get things like bright

26:38 , you get things like benthic You could gaster pods that graze on

26:43 seagrass. Okay, and why is important? That's important because the grass

26:49 only lift each grass blade. Let start over. Each plant Proceed four

26:55 . Alright. And each blade only 15 days. So every 60

27:01 whatever is living on Those blades becomes of the seven. Right? As

27:05 blades die. And what happens to organic material of the blade? It

27:10 disintegrates. Right, get oxidized in water column, and it disintegrates.

27:15 are you left with? You're left all this carbon material that wouldn't be

27:20 if the sea grass blades weren't there begin with. Okay, so that's

27:24 much more subtle organic influence on carbonate then, of course, in

27:31 we get borrowing activity. These volcano features, you see here underwater are

27:37 uh mounds of excreted sediment produced by shrimp. The borrowing shrimp look like

27:46 . They're about the scale of This or 3". Okay. That's as

27:52 as they are. But look at tails. They're separated. The tales

27:56 adapted to digging. All right. so what do these shrimp do they

28:01 ? They're deep escalating borrowers. They down like this. They put outside

28:06 at one level, they go to level. They put outside chambers like

28:10 . Okay. And when they encounter screen material, they don't try to

28:14 it out to the top to make volcano man, they packed the side

28:18 with the shell material. What do push out the top? The lightweight

28:22 pellets that they produce? Okay, what are they shrimp doing? They

28:28 first of all destroying any primary Right? And then secondly, they're

28:33 oxygenated water into the sediment. So doing what They're oxidizing organic material.

28:39 destroying the potential for that rock or to be a source rock.

28:44 so when we talk about carbonate source later, you'll see that all the

28:48 class carbonate source rocks are associated with settings where you didn't have anything living

28:54 the sea floor, right? Including burrowing organisms. And these are the

29:01 pellets. So if you sample the of one of those borough mounds and

29:05 it back and to the lab and run it through as if this is

29:10 you would get. These are what call the hardened fecal pellets there,

29:15 he cemented after deposition on the sea . These are the ones that better

29:20 in the sediment. Okay. And can see from the millimeter scale here

29:24 of them have a short diameter less one millimeter. And they all have

29:29 unique ovoid to live soil shape. , so these are called fecal pellets

29:34 the modern environments. That's another influence organic activity on the sea floor.

29:42 organic influence perhaps a little bit more is activity related to boring organisms.

29:50 by boring, we're not talking about and personality. We're talking about physical

29:57 where an organism takes bores into hard . Okay. And how does it

30:03 that? It either does that by creating a hole or by excreting acid

30:10 dissolve the carbon a material or doing . Okay, so all of the

30:14 you see here in this coral were by various boring organisms. This is

30:19 boring Wallace where the militia was still . You see these little features like

30:26 . He's open galleries. These are by boring sponges. And then you

30:31 these linear holes like this. These created either by boring worms for boring

30:38 . Okay, so what are they ? Well, first thing they're doing

30:42 they're creating ferocity. Right? That's they want to live right there creating

30:46 habitat where they can live. But importantly, they're taking a bigger piece

30:50 coral and they're breaking it down into sand silt sized or mud size

30:56 And this is the way we break down on the sea floor.

30:59 This is why our lime stones are made up of these huge shells.

31:04 ? There all stuff that gets broken either by sharks and stingrays or by

31:09 macro boring organisms. All right. you can see the slide here,

31:14 rate that these organisms produce sediment, boring sponge, for example, can

31:19 up to 20 kg of sediment per . I mean, that's incredible when

31:24 think about it. All right. , we'll build on this relationship when

31:29 when we talk about some of the carbonate environments. And then two slides

31:35 basically differentiate carbonates from classics in terms their the dye genetic potential. It's

31:41 carbonates. The thing that scares a of companies from chasing carbonate reservoirs is

31:47 productive prediction. Right. And they're concerned about predicting ferocity because they know

31:54 systems are much more reactive than a . Simple sandstone. Uh,

31:59 right, courts doesn't react very And even, you know, feldspar

32:05 , but certainly not to the degree certainly don't get the degree of dissolution

32:09 we get in these carbonate systems. so the post deposition, all these

32:16 are very susceptible. Post oppositional highly reactive system. I'm sure you've

32:21 put to loot hydrochloric acid on a . You see it fizz,

32:25 That's a reflection of its higher So it has a higher solid solid

32:30 than courts. But even within the of carbonate mineralogy, right? A

32:35 calcite, dolomite, those minerals have stability relationships too. And that's one

32:41 the drivers. We're going to talk tomorrow for die genesis for both for

32:45 stones and dollar stones. All And then what's another important control is

32:49 size of the particles. Right. you want to dissolve something in

32:53 what do you do you make it her grand. Right. You powder

32:57 . So final Grand carbonate reacts much quickly than coarser grained carbonate material.

33:02 an important control on solid ability Right. And what's interesting about these

33:08 systems, whether it's more low energy carbonate system or high energy carbonate.

33:13 reef. Most of these systems start with relatively high porosity and permeability is

33:18 the sea floor. Which means that off the bat, if you bring

33:21 right kind of fluid through that rocker , you can start to modify

33:26 Die genetically. Even on the sea , you can't do that in the

33:30 of classics. Right? Nothing happens in the world of plastics. On

33:34 sea floor. Everything is driven by burial. Okay, so early die

33:39 is very important in carbonates. Not at all in a classic system.

33:46 as a result, we end up carbonate ferocity. That's much more complex

33:50 terms of its geometry and genesis compared sand stones, we have a mixture

33:55 what we call pre deposition of That's the ferocity associated. But the

34:00 fossils of the organisms lived on the floor. Right? And then we

34:06 other environmental processes that control the texture the sediment and the texture obviously has

34:12 impact on the starting processing permeability. . But that's just what happens on

34:17 sea floor. Then we have to concerned what happens when you take those

34:21 and you start to progressively bury Well, that's the world of die

34:25 . And this is what creates the of trying to predict process ahead of

34:29 drill bit. But we'll try to some sense out of this tomorrow.

34:33 we get into more detailed discussion about diet genesis. All right, So

34:38 me just show you a couple of to illustrate some of these relationships and

34:42 I'll build on this in much more tomorrow. The first slide here is

34:48 underwater photograph taken on that white sand system that I showed you in the

34:52 photograph. So you're looking down about , 20 ft of water. And

34:58 what do you see on the sea ? You see some ripple dualistic sands

35:02 here on the bottom left side. most of the bottom here looks like

35:06 rocky outcrop. Yes, yeah. it is because what's happening here,

35:12 of the olympic stand is being cemented place to create this hard ground

35:17 So this is an example of early genesis on the sea floor where right

35:22 some of the sands are being cemented a reaganite. It is precipitating out

35:26 the marine water column. So this called marine sanitation. And the byproduct

35:32 what we call a marine hard which is this stock cropping material you

35:37 on the sea floor. Okay. then if you look at this in

35:41 section, you can see the nature these cements. All right there they

35:47 . All the way around the zoo which are magnetic and the cement sarl

35:54 uh because of the way they don't to a certain type of stain.

35:59 know there are magnetic and uh this material that literally starts to precipitate within

36:05 few months or a few years on sea floor. And then is that

36:09 ground develops? You keep adding more more cement as you pass seawater through

36:14 hard ground. Okay, so that's example of uh essentially Cindy positional marine

36:21 . Now sometimes our carbonates and we'll stick with the simple analytic stand

36:26 Sometimes I carbonates get exposed severely to water. Either regionally sea level drops

36:32 a low standard sea level or we an island up above sea level to

36:36 it to rainfall. Well, what to a magnetic goods a reaganite doesn't

36:42 to be exposed to fresh water so quickly dissolves. Okay. And so

36:47 what happened here in the Jurassic. former Reagan ecowas were exposed to fresh

36:53 . They dissolved out to create what secondary molding ferocity. But what happens

36:59 that dissolved carbonate? It goes back the system and re saturates and re

37:05 as a more stable form of low calcite. Low magnesium calcite is stable

37:10 fresh water Oregon. It's not So here's an example of what we

37:15 Parisian version controlled by the starting meteorology by exposure to fresh water. And

37:23 of course, sometimes rus sands never any marine sedimentation, any exposure to

37:28 water. They just get progressively Well, this is a common

37:32 right? They end up being not by exposure to fresh water,

37:37 they get dissolved because of pressure. is pressure solution. All right.

37:42 all heard of the term skylight? this is this is like a style

37:46 but it's called grain to grain. . Train wherever the grains touch,

37:49 dissolve and inter penetrate into each other of the extreme pressure. Okay.

37:56 we'll talk about this in more detail . And then sometimes after these uh

38:03 example, the zoo it sands have buried into the realm of virtual

38:07 You can see the grains are future later. If there's still some permeability

38:12 those brain stones, you bring the kind of fluid through. You can

38:15 this is all some of those they're not a magnetic anymore. They've

38:19 been stabilized to cal side, but they're seeing a fluid that is aggressive

38:24 to dissolve even the cal citic material that grain. And this is what

38:29 call barrel dissolution. So all the Hugh that you see here in the

38:34 , it is secondary micro porosity created burial dissolution. Barrel dissolution just means

38:40 occurs after the onset of the pressure . And we'll talk about how deep

38:46 have to be for that tomorrow. right. But roughly a 1000 m

38:51 , but it could be a lot than that. All right.

38:55 you see there are all these different for di genesis that affects reservoir

39:00 And this is what we need to about. And then apply to our

39:03 type discussion toward the end of the . This is just limestone die

39:09 We haven't even talked about Dolomites. , right. So, there are

39:13 number of major reservoirs around the world produced from these dola stones. And

39:18 we'll try to make sense out of decolonization process tomorrow afternoon and try to

39:25 about the different pathways for making reservoir and dramatized lime stones. Okay,

39:33 . All right. So, to of summarize these are the questions that

39:37 going to try to answer over the several weekends, give you a feel

39:41 where carbonate systems form, both in and deep water. Talk about the

39:46 controls on these carbonates systems. What their their occurrence and distribution. Right

39:52 each faces type. And again, way we're using the term faces.

39:57 a rock that reflects an environment of . All right. So platform margin

40:03 reef is a faces type. The flat as they face this time grain

40:08 is not faces. Pakistan does not . You want to associate a position

40:14 these depositions profiles when we use this faces. Okay, everybody understand.

40:20 for each faces, we're gonna first with the modern we're going to talk

40:24 the size and shape or geometry. talking about distribution Environmental Association. We're

40:30 going to talk about what controls the starting porosity and permeability. And then

40:36 going to happen. We're going to about what happens these carbon assistance when

40:39 get progressively buried. And then one we need to answer is to these

40:45 systems. Some of these carbonates systems organic material in quantity suitable enough to

40:51 a source rock. And when I in this business Back in the

40:57 nobody thought carbonates can be a source . But now they're world class source

41:01 all over the place. And so answer to that question obviously is is

41:05 . Okay. And then what are conventional unconventional carbonate play types? I'll

41:11 what I mean by conventional unconventional when get there. But I do think

41:15 is some predictability here with respect to fizz a graphic setting and with respect

41:19 geological age. And so I'll share you my classification scheme for trying to

41:26 about where these carbonate playtime's exist. if you're in the cretaceous and you're

41:31 at a platform to base in what kind of plays could you develop

41:37 that deposition profile? Okay, that's I want you to start thinking about

41:42 appreciate toward the end of the Yeah. Okay. So you're gonna

41:47 this when I when we start our about carbonate plays, you're going to

41:52 this slide again. Every play obviously a in a relationship between reservoir,

41:59 nearby source rock doesn't have to be could be a shale source rock.

42:04 need a ceiling faces. Right? be carbonate or could be shale.

42:09 . And then you need a trapping . And so historically most of our

42:14 or what we call combination traps have structural and strata graphic component. But

42:21 going to find more and more strata traps as we use three D seismic

42:26 , more and more in industry. we are finding more strata. Graphic

42:30 . All right. So they're going become more and more common now that's

42:34 play type. Right, Made up these three elements source rock.

42:38 seal faces. This is what we to talk about for each of those

42:43 before we get to our discussion about place to understand the big scale controls

42:48 deposition all faces and digest history on play type elements. And then how

42:54 these control? Well, they're controlled things like barrel history and the poor

42:58 chemistry that comes with progressive burial. controlled on a bigger scale by fizzy

43:02 setting geological age relative sea level changes things like that. Okay, so

43:09 come back and talk about put this together. Later when we talk about

43:13 play types for the next several sessions get together this is what I'm going

43:18 be talking about. Right? The of deposition, influence of die genesis

43:23 some of the big scale controls that into play to drive each of those

43:29 . Okay, now I need to a couple more comments here and then

43:33 we'll break we'll take our break. minute break. Um I want to

43:39 sure you understand that the four different that we're gonna be talking about for

43:43 segment. All right. Ah Calcium is broken out into three mineral

43:51 A Reaganite. Hi matt calcite. high magnesium calcite. So we just

43:57 the community we just say hi Mag and then lo mein calcite.

44:02 so what's the difference between these The difference is a reaganite is a

44:09 mineral With a specific gravity of So it's very dense crystal lattice.

44:16 inner crystalline spaces are the inner I even think of the right word to

44:24 this. But the space between the irons is so tiny that the only

44:29 you can easily substitute in a reaganite the calcium is straining. Okay.

44:35 sometimes you can substitute up to 10,000 astronomy. Um and some of the

44:40 to make a modern day corals for . Right now calcite as you see

44:46 a hexagonal system is still calcium carbonate a different crystal structure. Hexagonal is

44:51 little bit more open structure. So actually easier to substitute cat irons like

44:58 and iron and manganese. Okay. when you substitute anywhere from 4 to

45:05 magnesium for the calcium, cat And you do it in a random

45:10 . This is what we call high calcite. Okay. So if you

45:15 to the modern today, if you go back to Luther bank and you

45:19 a sample of the settlement off the floor and you come back to the

45:23 and you run it through the X diffraction machine. What is the sediment

45:27 be comprised of mineral, logically mostly reaganite and I made calcite because that's

45:33 the organisms form initially in their skeleton that's what the U. S.

45:37 made up of a reaganite. Right physical chemical precipitation. Those minerals are

45:43 very happy in seawater, normal But what happens when you take those

45:47 minerals out of seawater, they very stabilize through digestive processes to what we

45:54 Loma calcite. So Lomax calcite is a hexagonal mineral. But now what

46:00 ? You lose the magnesium, you out most of the magnesium. Just

46:04 just eliminate it. You only have or two, Sometimes 4% magnesium.

46:11 by definition low mag cal side is less than for percent magnesium randomly distributing

46:19 callously lattice. So you go back the rock record while most lime stones

46:23 made up of lome account site, may have started out having a lot

46:28 a reaganite or a lot of time cal side. But now there are

46:32 down into a more stable form of medical side. Okay. And that's

46:38 related to die genesis. And we'll about more detail tomorrow. And then

46:42 this unique mineral called dolomite, Which explain in more detail tomorrow. Dolomite

46:47 definition has 50% calcium, 50% Now randomly just not randomly distributed

46:55 Now, it's alternating plains of calcium magnesium. Cat Island separated by planes

47:01 the carbonate and irons. Okay, an ordering to the distribution of the

47:06 and calcium. All right. That's unique mineral called dolomite. All

47:11 And we'll obviously talk about that later what happens to a lot of lime

47:16 in the rock record? They get to dolomite. And we need to

47:21 about that. And we will tomorrow . Okay. And then I want

47:28 to appreciate this diagram which has been in the literature for or modified versions

47:33 it have been around literature for for long time here. Well over 20

47:40 . And you can see this concept calcite a reaganite sees, right?

47:46 there's a slide behind this that I'm over. That explains party and Stanley's

47:51 about why you go from the Reagan seize to calcite sees they basically related

47:57 sea floor spreading right? The reaction seawater with the bath salts modifies the

48:04 and calcium ratio seawater. Obviously when have a lot of magnesium in the

48:09 column, that favors times where you a reaganite or high mag calcite

48:16 And when you don't obviously you get calcite precipitation. So you can see

48:22 people have broken the south. This of calcite, a reaganite sees through

48:26 time. I don't have a problem this. I just want you to

48:31 that if you're in a calcite, that doesn't mean everything is going to

48:35 cal siddiq. And if you're in rag and I'd see everything can be

48:38 magnetic. All right. Sometimes you make a reaganite season accounts organized cement

48:44 a so called cal side. See you can have a regular, you

48:48 have regulated organisms living in a for , the upper upper paleozoic,

48:56 Times of Yeah propellers. OIC. you're still in supposedly a calcified

49:02 right. Some organisms can do whatever darn Well please by physical physical chemically

49:10 a reaganite or high, make calcified in a so called calcite C.

49:16 , So take this with a grain salt. Use it, you

49:19 to sort of guide you, but get the impression that if you're in

49:23 calcite, see everything was cal Okay, that's not the case.

49:27 right. And then let me introduce to the trade wind belts here.

49:34 is a relatively new concept. uh, this is why this is

49:42 representation of why I said fizzy graphic at a global scale is so

49:48 All right. So the global scale where does your environment deposition sit relative

49:55 the equator? So where is the today? It's right here.

50:01 Runs through southern africa, northern part South America. And you can see

50:07 broken out the white color belts on either side of the equator

50:14 what is called the Doldrums. That's the sailors term. Right?

50:21 you're an ocean going sailor, you want to sail in the doldrums because

50:25 wind doesn't blow. Okay. So you're on either side of the

50:30 , there's no persistent trade wind All right. And then what happens

50:35 you go from To 30° north south of the equator. You go

50:41 a tropical to subtropical belt that is by easterly trade winds. Okay,

50:48 the strong easterly trade winds only operate five degrees to about 22 degrees north

50:55 south of the equator From 22 to , it's the more gentle easterly trade

51:01 . Okay. And then what happens you go north or south of

51:05 You get into the western lease? . And that's into your temperate water

51:11 . All right. Cool water Now, what do we mean by

51:15 trade winds? We don't mean that winds just blow out of the eastern

51:19 . The winds can come from the . They can come from the

51:22 They can come from the southeast that vary from year to year. That

51:27 vary during the year. Okay. this is very, very important concept

51:34 you will not find in the older Prior to the I'd say the mid

51:41 . Okay. Nobody knew about trade because nobody had worked in modern setting

51:46 we had strong trade wind influences. . But we've worked one in the

51:51 Bahamas now, and I'm going to that information with you and I'm sure

51:54 you all the application that comes along this and it's something that needs to

51:58 factored into any evaluation in the rock . If you were influenced by easterly

52:05 winds right from north or south the equator to 30° north and

52:11 I'll come back and build on this and I'll show you the modern responses

52:16 the trade winds. And I'll show the application of the trade wind influences

52:20 actually, to carbonate place and Okay, so when you go back

52:25 the rock record, we have all published maps now that show you the

52:29 geography that exist for different geological time . And this is one for the

52:35 cretaceous. And here's the gulf of . Right? Which we're going to

52:40 quite a bit about because there's a of cretaceous and Jurassic oil and gas

52:44 around the periphery of this ancestral gulf Mexico basin. Well, what does

52:50 map suggests? We set where where we sit? Paleo geographically? There's

52:56 equator And we're about what? 15° of the equator based on relationships

53:02 That puts us in the heart of strong easterly trade wind belt. That

53:07 the area's off of the florida would been leeward to those strong winds.

53:13 means areas like Mexico would have been into the winds. It would have

53:17 windward facing. Okay, these are things. You need to think

53:22 All right. And so we can these maps to guide us to sort

53:26 think about where we're at. I never take these maps specifically and say

53:33 I'm right here, I'm in the subtropical setting. I would try to

53:41 the geology to prove these relationships. , and I'm going to show you

53:44 we do that during this segment. . Mhm. All right. And

53:50 , um Okay, I'm a rock . I look at, I have

53:56 at tons of core. I've looked literally tens of thousands of thin sections

54:00 my career. And you're gonna see lot of thin section data here because

54:04 carbonates we have to get to the section level in order to confirm face

54:09 relationships and understand die genesis and reservoir . So, historically, what is

54:17 way people have looked at a thin ? They looked at it with they

54:21 the thin section on the microscope. you see here, like coming up

54:25 the thin sections called plane polarized You cross the nickels on either side

54:30 the light goes up in one that's called cross Nichols. Cross Nichols

54:35 what gives you the colours to the . Right. That's called by

54:39 And that's what we historically used to court screen from a feldspar grain from

54:46 uh carbonate piece of carbon, a . Okay, but Back in the

54:53 80s, as you see here, stumbled on a technique called fluorescent

54:58 where you generate this high intense blue light, you reflected on the thin

55:03 . And that allows you to see fabric. And if you spike your

55:09 with the fluorescent died to see micro and these carbonates that you can't see

55:15 the normal thin section views. And then I'll show you pictures of

55:20 as we go along. And so you see photographs in your notes where

55:25 a scale bar and it says That was shot with fluorescent microscopy.

55:30 . And then a few years I stumbled on this simple white paper

55:34 where you put a piece of white paper on your thin set on your

55:39 the and the microscope stage and you light up from underneath. I call

55:45 diffused plane polarized light. The simple that you've seen the literature is white

55:50 technique. And what does this What does this technique do allows you

55:55 see the blue microprocessor t easily without the fluorescent its attachment. And then

56:02 also allows you see really grain fabric highly altered lime stones or dullest stones

56:06 you can't see with any of these techniques. So, you see pictures

56:10 this. I just want you to you see the acronyms your P.

56:14 . F M X N. And you'll see these on the photographs of

56:19 thin section pictures that I have in power points. Okay. That I'll

56:24 from. And I just want you know how this was shot. All

56:28 . And then the last slide, , the President a composition of of

56:34 seawater. Uh you can see the proportion of the obviously a lot of

56:40 and sodium, but I want you appreciate there's a lot of magnesium and

56:43 a seawater. The magnesium comes into when we're trying to talk about how

56:48 make early form dolomite? A lot the early form Dolomites are coming from

56:53 modified seawater. Okay. And then want you to appreciate that we're going

56:59 use this term open marine to characterize of these environments of deposition. What

57:04 that term mean? It means normal , which today is 35 parts per

57:09 . So, when we talk about inferred open marine environment back in the

57:13 record, we're implying similar relationship to we have today, Which means 35

57:20 per 1000 salinity and good exchanges seawater that environment. Okay, yeah.

57:29 Questions or comments before we take our minute break. All right, I'm

57:37 to pause. We're going to start the the different grain types will start

57:47 with the non skeletal grain types. are not carbon particles derived directly from

57:52 breakdown of the skeletal hard parts of . But many of these grains are

57:57 by uh Oftentimes influenced by organic And so we want to talk about

58:04 and then we'll come back and talk the skull of particles as our last

58:08 this afternoon. And again, the here is to introduce you to the

58:14 green types, how we recognize how we think they form and then

58:19 importantly, talk about their environmental Right? So, if we find

58:23 new it in the settlement, we a uh fecal pellet or uh even

58:29 mud in the sediment? What does tell us about the deposition environment or

58:33 does it help us to better interpret deposition environment? So that's the whole

58:39 . But to go through this, gonna overwhelm you with all this

58:42 So be patient as we work through . And I'll try to apply this

58:47 . When we get into our discussion modern carbonate environments. So this is

58:52 standard list of carbonate, not scalable . By convention. Everybody lists.

58:57 mud is one of the components, though lime mud, which is very

59:01 grained carbon material can be sourced from skeletal or non skeletal material. By

59:07 , we listed as a non scalable type and lime mud in the modern

59:13 unconsolidated. Right. If you were walk through a muddy environment, you

59:16 up to your ankles or knees in muddy sediment. But when it gets

59:21 in the rock record, we don't the term line mud. We use

59:24 term Mick. Right, Mick, , is an acronym for micro crystalline

59:29 and reflects this transformation from a muddy textured material to a hard

59:36 Okay, and then the rest of grain types are listed here are all

59:40 sized grain types, all greater than a half microns in size. Many

59:46 these hundreds of microns two millimeter and the first would be composite

59:51 So there are three types of composite . So one grain made up of

59:55 particles. Inter class lumps and lift class, I'll explain these in detail

60:00 a minute and then fecal pellets. already been introduced to this a little

60:05 . I'll build on this relationship in minute. And then I want to

60:10 you to another group called altar grains some of these sand sized grains that

60:14 see on the sea floor were formed some sort of marine di genetic alteration

60:20 the sea floor. And whether we them P. Lloyd's or crypto crystalline

60:24 depends on uh the shape of the . All right, so it's been

60:29 critic fabric a very fine um a fabric if it's ovoid shaped, they're

60:34 P Lloyd's. If they're regularly they're called crypto crystalline grains and then

60:39 coda grains would be you, it's acolytes. And then pies lights.

60:44 , so okay, let's work our through this. We'll start first with

60:49 origins of lime mud. And these illustrate potentially the different uh pathways for

60:56 fine grained carbon a material that we line mud. Now you need to

61:02 that people that have worked modern carbonate going back to the mid-1950s, What

61:07 would do is take a sieve out the field, right, 125 micron

61:12 sieve and they would they'd washed their through that. Anything that came through

61:17 sieve, they called lime mud. anything less under 25 microns was described

61:21 mud. Anything coarser grain was obviously carbonate sand. And that was the

61:27 off that everybody used and still uses . Right. So we can compare

61:30 area to another area. But what my mud? My mud is material

61:35 so fine grain That you can't see individual components. You can't see with

61:40 eyeball. You can't see with the lands. You can't see with a

61:44 microscope, you can't even see it a thin section. Okay, so

61:49 , we're talking about material that is microns in size. All the way

61:53 to sub micron sized material. Where see it? You would need a

61:57 electron microscope to do that. so that's really what we should when

62:03 played this to the rock record, really what we should use the

62:07 Cut off anything less than 20 or microns in size. But I just

62:11 you to know that every everybody in modern, including myself, We all

62:17 use 125 micron. As size ranges cut off between fine grained mud and

62:23 sand. All right now, what the ways to make this fine grained

62:28 a material? We know in the , that one common way is disintegration

62:32 calculus algae. A few percent of cal curious algae or modern green

62:39 Are cal Correas, which means when alive on the sea floor they precipitate

62:45 their tissue. Tiny needles of a And by tiny, we're talking about

62:49 raggedy needles that might be 10 or microns in length, one or 2

62:55 across for scale. Okay. And they die, they're organic material

63:01 And what do they release the environment deposition? The tiny needles of a

63:05 . So that's a contributor to lime . Again, why is that

63:11 It's important because these plants only live a few months, then they are

63:15 by another plan. So the rapid allows you to account for a lot

63:20 the slime mud in some of these environments. In fact, the breakdown

63:25 calculus algae, for example, easily for all the lime mud we see

63:30 in florida Bay off of the Everglades south florida. Okay, What's another

63:37 another way is by by erosion of substrates? I mentioned, the macro

63:42 and what they do to bigger pieces coral and shells. Right? Some

63:46 the material they break down is silty size material, but this boring activity

63:52 on a finer scale. There are boring algae and fungi that take an

63:58 sand sized grains. The scale there is 20 microns, and what

64:03 they do to the grain they bore that individual sand sized grain they're creating

64:09 to live in. But in creating whole they're releasing mud sized carbonate material

64:14 the environment of deposition. All Very, very common process, but

64:19 very difficult process to quantify. You quantify what the macro brewers produce.

64:26 ? And you do that in the in an aquarium and see how much

64:29 they produce. But you can't do to the micro borough. So nobody

64:33 for sure exactly how much one micro algae produces in terms of mud sized

64:39 . But when you look at any section of modern sediments riddled with these

64:43 Boren's, you know that they contribute lot of fine grain carbonate material.

64:48 right, So that's a very common . And then on the lower left

64:53 of mobile carbonate sediments. When you active agitation of sediment being moved by

65:00 wind wave agitation or tidal currents, ? The grains, sands are

65:04 they're moving back and forth, You're get grain to grain abrasion and that's

65:09 break off bits and pieces of carbon material. Again, very difficult to

65:13 , but it certainly happens because if if you snorkel on any modern

65:19 high energy sand body system, whether skeletal or analytic, where there's a

65:24 of rippling of the sediment right on shallow part of that sand body,

65:28 water has sort of a cloudy color it. When you get off of

65:32 sand body system, the water is clear. So clearly you're breaking off

65:36 and pieces of material. Again, difficult to quantify. And then uh

65:43 is sort of tongue in cheek. I put in fish, there are

65:46 tropical fish that actually seem to precipitate in their guts. Carbonate mud biologists

65:53 they probably use it to help them digestion. Of course, every time

65:57 fish dies is going to contribute a bit of carbonate mud to the

66:02 Again, this is more tongue in than anything. But well, what

66:08 do is they break off bits and of coral and stuff like that and

66:11 produce sand sized material and then they that and they pass it through their

66:17 and they kick it out. You've seen it if you snorkel on the

66:20 , we saw parrotfish basically pooping out sized material. Right? That's what

66:25 do. Right? So they feed the dead coral, they're eating the

66:29 of bacteria that lives on the dead . The last mechanism here, direct

66:35 from sea water. This is the controversial mechanism. This was proposed back

66:41 the late 18 Uh 1890, I . So, it's well over 100

66:46 old. The concept is that in parts of the water column the water

66:51 so supersaturated that precipitates tiny bits and of barragan. I'd material to create

66:59 mud maybe. Yeah. So a of controversy. I have a hard

67:05 with this model because most of the only occurs supposed precipitation occurs in the

67:12 water settings, not the high energy . Right? You all you all

67:18 chemistry 101, right. And you uh something out of water.

67:25 what did you have to do to water? And you had to supersaturated

67:29 then you had to have something on to precipitate had to be warm enough

67:34 precipitation. And then what was the thing? You had to have the

67:37 rod and have agitation. If you have those four things operating together,

67:41 didn't get precipitation out of that Okay, yet here people are asking

67:46 to believe that you precipitate this material in these quiet water settings.

67:53 well, address this in a But these are the these are the

67:57 are the four ways that people have that you can create lime mud in

68:03 modern carbonate environments. Okay, so a here's an air photograph from part

68:10 great bahama Bank. Uh this would west of Luther bank that I showed

68:15 in the shuttle photograph. And what looking at here is a inner part

68:20 the carbonate platform. This is stand water here. So it's two or

68:24 ft of water depth here and you see these white areas in the water

68:28 . These are what are called Whiting's these are what the geochemist argue or

68:33 of instantaneous precipitation of lime mud out the water column. Right? They

68:37 stick their ph meter in this water they look, it's it's prime for

68:42 . All these carbonate environments are prime precipitation. That's that's unique. Two

68:48 subtropical settings that don't have a lot classic or fresh water influx.

68:53 so it's not waiting. The other explanation of whiting is, and you

68:59 have heard this is it's fine grained stirred up by by bottom feeding

69:05 Right? And once you put this and suspension, it stays in the

69:10 column for days or weeks and it drawn off, drawn out like this

69:14 title exchange to give you the patterns see in this air photograph here.

69:19 that's the other explanation, but it's limited to these quiet water inter platform

69:28 , right situation, stagnant water and fact the salinity goes up a little

69:38 . Uh, the organism, the of organisms decreases because it's a little

69:42 more restricted. It's just the opposite the kind of setting you'd want to

69:46 precipitation. So if you go out the margin of this platform where you've

69:50 good reefs or sand development, you see any whiting's developed their only in

69:55 mormon critic low energy, quiet water . In fact, you know,

70:00 you I don't know if any of have ever bone fish, right?

70:02 you go to the caribbean, to fish. Where do the guides take

70:06 ? They take you to the winnings the bone fish put their snouts.

70:10 fish are about this big. they their snouts in the sediment to

70:14 they stir up this mud and the stays in suspension for days and

70:18 We know this. Okay. There's a white shark adapted to the

70:24 You think the shark is tracking the of instantaneous precipitation where he's tracking the

70:30 fish? Yeah, No, I so personally, I have a hard

70:34 with this being instantaneous precipitation and further it was a setting for precipitation,

70:40 to see precipitation in and on the sediment and you don't see that.

70:45 , But you get that out on reef. Sand. High energy sand

70:49 where you don't have weddings. But this is the controversy. I

70:55 , I've got I've got good friends colleagues who still think this is these

70:58 zones of instantaneous precipitation. Right. supposed there's dust but not carbonate

71:13 That's cloud sit rows. So it yeah, that's happening today. Coming

71:21 the Sahara. Yes, you don't usually create carbonate dust from the exposed

71:29 stones. All right. You're talking the less glacial till and stuff like

71:38 . That's glacial till created by the grinding Iraq. There is dust coming

71:44 the Sarah desert today that blows all way across the atlantic into these carbonate

71:50 . Okay. And that's been proven monitoring stations all the way across the

71:56 and then they captured the dust on caribbean islands. Mhm. Right.

72:03 good. Just now it dissolves the , cement it up. And if

72:14 want to erode it, you've got do it by some other process.

72:18 . Okay, correct. That's what refer to as cursed. Okay.

72:29 . So that's all I want to about Whiting's. I mean, you

72:34 and you've got all the handouts that give you have tons of references to

72:40 to these slides and everything I'm talking . So you can always go chase

72:44 of these references down. Uh She a little bit more detail but uh

72:48 think pretty clearly one of the common in these modern settings is first of

72:53 disintegration of the calculus algae. This a typical mud producing algae. That's

72:57 common all through the shallow parts of caribbean. Uh It's called the

73:02 As And you see the scale The plants only about this big It

73:07 this whole fast the seven water interfaces here. Uh It's in the

73:12 What precipitates these tiny Oregon i But because the plan only list for

73:17 few months and then dies, that's you can contribute or add a lot

73:22 the syringe and needle mud to these of deposition. And people have done

73:27 crop studies to show that in some that I mentioned florida bay, that

73:31 can account for all the lime Just by this mechanism alone.

73:36 forget the by erosion. Forget the to grain abrasion. Just by this

73:40 alone, you can create all the

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