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Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology.

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Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology. / Fairchild, Ian J.; Spotl, Christoph; Frisia, Silvia et al.
In: Geological Society Special Publications, Vol. 336, 2010, p. 295-321.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Fairchild, IJ, Spotl, C, Frisia, S, Borsato, A, Susini, J, Wynn, PM & Cauzid, J 2010, 'Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology.', Geological Society Special Publications, vol. 336, pp. 295-321. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP336.16

APA

Fairchild, I. J., Spotl, C., Frisia, S., Borsato, A., Susini, J., Wynn, P. M., & Cauzid, J. (2010). Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology. Geological Society Special Publications, 336, 295-321. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP336.16

Vancouver

Fairchild IJ, Spotl C, Frisia S, Borsato A, Susini J, Wynn PM et al. Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology. Geological Society Special Publications. 2010;336:295-321. doi: 10.1144/SP336.16

Author

Fairchild, Ian J. ; Spotl, Christoph ; Frisia, Silvia et al. / Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology. In: Geological Society Special Publications. 2010 ; Vol. 336. pp. 295-321.

Bibtex

@article{2c9c4bc4197a4749bff37b87431b99f6,
title = "Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology.",
abstract = "Calcite stalagmites from Obir, an Alpine (1100 m altitude), perennially wet cave, were studied using optical and electron backscatter diffraction petrology, bulk ICP-MS analysis, and microanalysis by ion microprobe and micro-X-ray fluorescence using synchrotron radiation. Drip water penetrates 70 m through Triassic limestones (with some Pb-Zn mineralization) to the chamber S{\"a}ulenhalle where the stalagmites were collected and with which we compared drip water compositions. However, the cave is also characterized by strong seasonal ventilation, leading to low PCO2 in winter. All samples display autumnal event lamination defined by a narrow, optically visible zone with trace element enrichments, within which synchrotron studies have resolved micron-scale enrichments of Pb and Zn. Crystallite-scale (10 μm) lateral trace element variations reflect alternate smooth faces and rough crystal edges, induced by high Zn content. Seasonal falls in sulphate S and increase in δ13C can be associated with the winter ventilation. The elemental covariations support the transport of Pb, Zn, P, F, Br and I by organic colloids, but final depositions from aerosols rather than dripwater should be considered. The chemical variations are powerful expressions of seasonal cave physiology, but the study points to important gaps in our understanding of colloidal element transport in ventilated caves.",
author = "Fairchild, {Ian J.} and Christoph Spotl and Silvia Frisia and Andrea Borsato and Jean Susini and Wynn, {Peter M.} and Jean Cauzid",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1144/SP336.16",
language = "English",
volume = "336",
pages = "295--321",
journal = "Geological Society Special Publications",
issn = "0305-8719",
publisher = "Geological Society of London",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Petrology and geochemistry of annually laminated stalagmites from an Alpine cave (Obir, Austria) : seasonal cave physiology.

AU - Fairchild, Ian J.

AU - Spotl, Christoph

AU - Frisia, Silvia

AU - Borsato, Andrea

AU - Susini, Jean

AU - Wynn, Peter M.

AU - Cauzid, Jean

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Calcite stalagmites from Obir, an Alpine (1100 m altitude), perennially wet cave, were studied using optical and electron backscatter diffraction petrology, bulk ICP-MS analysis, and microanalysis by ion microprobe and micro-X-ray fluorescence using synchrotron radiation. Drip water penetrates 70 m through Triassic limestones (with some Pb-Zn mineralization) to the chamber Säulenhalle where the stalagmites were collected and with which we compared drip water compositions. However, the cave is also characterized by strong seasonal ventilation, leading to low PCO2 in winter. All samples display autumnal event lamination defined by a narrow, optically visible zone with trace element enrichments, within which synchrotron studies have resolved micron-scale enrichments of Pb and Zn. Crystallite-scale (10 μm) lateral trace element variations reflect alternate smooth faces and rough crystal edges, induced by high Zn content. Seasonal falls in sulphate S and increase in δ13C can be associated with the winter ventilation. The elemental covariations support the transport of Pb, Zn, P, F, Br and I by organic colloids, but final depositions from aerosols rather than dripwater should be considered. The chemical variations are powerful expressions of seasonal cave physiology, but the study points to important gaps in our understanding of colloidal element transport in ventilated caves.

AB - Calcite stalagmites from Obir, an Alpine (1100 m altitude), perennially wet cave, were studied using optical and electron backscatter diffraction petrology, bulk ICP-MS analysis, and microanalysis by ion microprobe and micro-X-ray fluorescence using synchrotron radiation. Drip water penetrates 70 m through Triassic limestones (with some Pb-Zn mineralization) to the chamber Säulenhalle where the stalagmites were collected and with which we compared drip water compositions. However, the cave is also characterized by strong seasonal ventilation, leading to low PCO2 in winter. All samples display autumnal event lamination defined by a narrow, optically visible zone with trace element enrichments, within which synchrotron studies have resolved micron-scale enrichments of Pb and Zn. Crystallite-scale (10 μm) lateral trace element variations reflect alternate smooth faces and rough crystal edges, induced by high Zn content. Seasonal falls in sulphate S and increase in δ13C can be associated with the winter ventilation. The elemental covariations support the transport of Pb, Zn, P, F, Br and I by organic colloids, but final depositions from aerosols rather than dripwater should be considered. The chemical variations are powerful expressions of seasonal cave physiology, but the study points to important gaps in our understanding of colloidal element transport in ventilated caves.

U2 - 10.1144/SP336.16

DO - 10.1144/SP336.16

M3 - Journal article

VL - 336

SP - 295

EP - 321

JO - Geological Society Special Publications

JF - Geological Society Special Publications

SN - 0305-8719

ER -