Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Preface to first edition
- A note about software
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Modeling overview
- Part I Equilibrium in natural waters
- Part II Reaction processes
- Part III Applied reaction modeling
- 22 Hydrothermal fluids
- 23 Geothermometry
- 24 Evaporation
- 25 Sediment diagenesis
- 26 Kinetics of water–rock interaction
- 27 Weathering
- 28 Oxidation and reduction
- 29 Waste injection wells
- 30 Petroleum reservoirs
- 31 Acid drainage
- 32 Contamination and remediation
- 33 Microbial communities
- Appendix 1 Sources of modeling software
- Appendix 2 Evaluating the HMW activity model
- Appendix 3 Minerals in the LLNL database
- Appendix 4 Nonlinear rate laws
- References
- Index
25 - Sediment diagenesis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Preface to first edition
- A note about software
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Modeling overview
- Part I Equilibrium in natural waters
- Part II Reaction processes
- Part III Applied reaction modeling
- 22 Hydrothermal fluids
- 23 Geothermometry
- 24 Evaporation
- 25 Sediment diagenesis
- 26 Kinetics of water–rock interaction
- 27 Weathering
- 28 Oxidation and reduction
- 29 Waste injection wells
- 30 Petroleum reservoirs
- 31 Acid drainage
- 32 Contamination and remediation
- 33 Microbial communities
- Appendix 1 Sources of modeling software
- Appendix 2 Evaluating the HMW activity model
- Appendix 3 Minerals in the LLNL database
- Appendix 4 Nonlinear rate laws
- References
- Index
Summary
Diagenesis is the set of processes by which sediments evolve after they are deposited and begin to be buried. Diagenesis includes physical effects such as compaction and the deformation of grains in the sediment (or sedimentary rock), as well as chemical reactions such as the dissolution of grains and the precipitation of minerals to form cements in the sediment's pore space. The chemical aspects of diagenesis are of special interest here.
Formerly, geologists considered chemical diagenesis to be a process by which the minerals and pore fluid in a sediment reacted with each other in response to changes in temperature, pressure, and stress. As early as the 1960s and especially since the 1970s, however, geologists have recognized that many diagenetic reactions occur in systems open to groundwater flow and mass transfer. The reactions proceed in response to a supply of reactants introduced into the sediments by flowing groundwater, which also serves to remove reaction products.
Hay (1963, 1966), in studies of the origin of diagenetic zeolite, was perhaps the first to emphasize the effects of mass transport on sediment diagenesis. He showed that sediments open to groundwater flow followed reaction pathways different from those observed in sediments through which flow was restricted. Sibley and Blatt (1976) used cathodoluminescence microscopy to observe the Tuscarora orthoquartzite of the Appalachian basin. The almost nonporous Tuscarora had previously been taken as a classic example of pressure welding, but the microscopy demonstrated that the rock is not especially well compacted but, instead, tightly cemented. The rock consists of as much as 40% quartz (SiO2) cement that was apparently deposited by advecting groundwater.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Geochemical and Biogeochemical Reaction Modeling , pp. 373 - 386Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007