2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2015.06.003
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Preservation of successive diagenetic stages in Middle Triassic bonebeds: Evidence from in situ trace element and strontium isotope analysis of vertebrate fossils

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Cited by 16 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 132 publications
(218 reference statements)
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“…It thus constitutes a slow, relatively inconsequential process rather than a rapid, strong geochemical shift that would be more apt to degrade bone organics. Moreover, even if leaching, late-diagenetic uptake, or other processes alter initial REE depth profiles to the degree that they no longer accurately record chemical signals from the original environment of burial (e.g., 27 , 64 ), the spatial distribution of REE within the specimen will still characterize the complexity of interactions the fossil had with pore fluids over the duration of burial because these interactions leave identifiable chemical signatures (e.g., 12 , 64 66 ). Thus, no matter the duration or mechanism(s) of uptake, REE profiles constitute a valuable record of the history of diagenetic regime(s) controlling initial bone alteration and long-term stability.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It thus constitutes a slow, relatively inconsequential process rather than a rapid, strong geochemical shift that would be more apt to degrade bone organics. Moreover, even if leaching, late-diagenetic uptake, or other processes alter initial REE depth profiles to the degree that they no longer accurately record chemical signals from the original environment of burial (e.g., 27 , 64 ), the spatial distribution of REE within the specimen will still characterize the complexity of interactions the fossil had with pore fluids over the duration of burial because these interactions leave identifiable chemical signatures (e.g., 12 , 64 66 ). Thus, no matter the duration or mechanism(s) of uptake, REE profiles constitute a valuable record of the history of diagenetic regime(s) controlling initial bone alteration and long-term stability.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 61 , 65 , 67 ), and/or; (4) were buried in dry/semi-dry depositional environments 68 . "Moderate diffusion" profiles (and the diagenetic histories that produce them) are most likely to occur in bones that: (1) have a thinner cortex or high porosity 12 , 26 , 30 , 65 , 69 ; (2) were exposed for an extended time (> 10 year, based on weathering) before burial 8 ; (3) were preserved in high-permeability sediments (e.g., coarse-grained sandstone, unconsolidated sediments 65 ), or; (4) were buried in wet/moist environments 60 , 64 , 66 , 68 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such fractionation patterns are commonly seen in fossil non-avian dinosaur bones possessing a thick cortex [40,43,65,116] due to a 'filtering' effect created by the thick rim of dense bone tissue, which can cause pore fluids to become relatively depleted in LREE by the time they reach the internal cortex [101]. Observation of such patterns in fossil bones is important, because they signify retention of early-diagenetic trace element signatures, which in turn demonstrates that late-diagenetic overprinting (which is nearly universal to some degree) [42,104] has neither completely obfuscated signatures imparted from the initial burial environment nor drastically altered the chemistry of the fossil specimen [36,48,80,[117][118][119][120]. In other words, the marked fractionation trends seen in the femur of MOR 1125 and bones at SRHS demonstrate that the bulk of the REE inventory in each respective specimen derives from early-diagenetic uptake from a single pore fluid (rather than late-diagenetic overprinting), and that these bones avoided any significant interactions with other pore fluids during late diagenesis.…”
Section: Emerging Taphonomic and Diagenetic Themesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…whereas carbonates with high Sr concentrations are considered to be less impacted by radioactive decay of 87 Rb from detrital components (Elderfield, 1986;McCormack et al, 2015).…”
Section: End Member Mixing In the Geshan Section Carbonatesmentioning
confidence: 99%