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AbstractAbstract
[en] Chemical and isotopic analyses of pore waters from Jamaican reef sediment suggest the importance of microbial sulfate reduction as a major control upon the origin, distribution, and composition of submarine cements in this fringing reef setting. Fore-reef sediment pore waters exhibit active sulfate reduction and enrichment in 18O which is consistent with associated active magnesian calcite cementation, alkalinity consumption, and cement enrichment in 18O. Conversely, lack of widespread submarine cementation in the back-reef corresponds to the diminished resupply of sulfate coupled with input of CO2-charged meteoric water from a nearby unconfined aquifer into the more stagnant pore waters which lower pore-water magnesian calcite saturation states and preclude active submarine cementation. (Auth.)
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47 refs.; 20 figs.; 2 tabs.
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Journal Article
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ALKALINE EARTH METAL COMPOUNDS, CARBON COMPOUNDS, CARBONATES, CHEMICAL ANALYSIS, CHEMICAL REACTIONS, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, EVEN-EVEN NUCLEI, HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS, ISLANDS, ISOTOPES, LIGHT NUCLEI, MAGNESIUM COMPOUNDS, MINERALS, NUCLEI, OXYGEN COMPOUNDS, OXYGEN ISOTOPES, POLAR SOLVENTS, SOLVENTS, STABLE ISOTOPES, SULFUR COMPOUNDS, WATER, WEST INDIES
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