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      Evaporites through time: Tectonic, climatic and eustatic controls in marine and nonmarine deposits

      Earth-Science Reviews
      Elsevier BV

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          Did the Atlantic Close and then Re-Open?

          J. Wilson (1966)
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            Secular variation in seawater chemistry: An explanation for the coupled secular variation in the mineralogies of marine limestones and potash evaporites over the past 600 m.y.

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              Oscillations in Phanerozoic seawater chemistry: evidence from fluid inclusions.

              Systematic changes in the chemistry of evaporated seawater contained in primary fluid inclusions in marine halites indicate that seawater chemistry has fluctuated during the Phanerozoic. The fluctuations are in phase with oscillations in seafloor spreading rates, volcanism, global sea level, and the primary mineralogies of marine limestones and evaporites. The data suggest that seawater had high Mg2+/Ca2+ ratios (>2.5) and relatively high Na+ concentrations during the Late Precambrian [544 to 543 million years ago (Ma)], Permian (258 to 251 Ma), and Tertiary through the present (40 to 0 Ma), when aragonite and MgSO4 salts were the dominant marine precipitates. Conversely, seawater had low Mg2+/Ca2+ ratios (<2.3) and relatively low Na+ concentrations during the Cambrian (540 to 520 Ma), Silurian (440 to 418 Ma), and Cretaceous (124 to 94 Ma), when calcite was the dominant nonskeletal carbonate and K-, Mg-, and Ca-bearing chloride salts, were the only potash evaporites.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Earth-Science Reviews
                Earth-Science Reviews
                Elsevier BV
                00128252
                February 2010
                February 2010
                : 98
                : 3-4
                : 217-268
                Article
                10.1016/j.earscirev.2009.11.004
                21a1bc14-a060-4e9b-b1b6-f721fbf173f5
                © 2010

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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