Graduation date: 2012Methane derived authigenic carbonate (MDAC) precipitation occurs within marine sediments as a byproduct of the microbial anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM). While these carbonates form in chemical and isotopic equilibrium with the fluids from which they precipitate, burial diagenesis and recrystallization can overprint these signals. Plane polarized light (PPL) and cathodoluminescent (CL) petrography have allowed for detailed characterization of carbonate phases and their subsequent alteration. Modern MDACs sampled offshore in northern Cascadia (n =33) are compared with paleoseep carbonates (n =13) uplifted on the Olympic Peninsula in order to elucidate primary vs. secondary signals, with relevance to interpretations ...
Methane-derived authigenic carbonates (MDACs) were collected around the largest pockmark on Umitaka ...
A study of the chemistry of pore fluids and authigenic carbonates in Chemical Geology 220 (2005) 329...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2007. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Authigenic carbonate precipitation occurs within marine sediments where sulfate-dependent anaerobic ...
Most authigenic carbonates previously recovered from the Cascadia slope have 87Sr/86Sr signatures th...
Methane seepage leads to Mg-calcite and aragonite precipitation at a depth of 4,850 m on the Aleutia...
Authigenic carbonates from five continental margin locations, the Eel River Basin, Monterey Bay, San...
The oceanographic and tectonic conditions of accretionary margins are well-suited for several potent...
Pervasive fluid advection is indicated in the geochemical depth profiles at four locations (five sit...
The recent discovery of active methane venting along the US northern and mid-Atlantic margin represe...
Carbonate precipitates on mounds and along tectonic scarps off the Costa Rica margin are manifestati...
Active fluid venting and carbonate formation occur in the accretionary prism in the Cascadia subduct...
Authigenic carbonates from cold seeps are unique archives for studying environmental conditions, inc...
The occurrence of secondary carbonate deposit within limestone fissures, called "endostromatolites",...
Methane seepage leads to Mg-calcite and aragonite precipitation at a depth of 4,850 m on the Aleutia...
Methane-derived authigenic carbonates (MDACs) were collected around the largest pockmark on Umitaka ...
A study of the chemistry of pore fluids and authigenic carbonates in Chemical Geology 220 (2005) 329...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2007. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Authigenic carbonate precipitation occurs within marine sediments where sulfate-dependent anaerobic ...
Most authigenic carbonates previously recovered from the Cascadia slope have 87Sr/86Sr signatures th...
Methane seepage leads to Mg-calcite and aragonite precipitation at a depth of 4,850 m on the Aleutia...
Authigenic carbonates from five continental margin locations, the Eel River Basin, Monterey Bay, San...
The oceanographic and tectonic conditions of accretionary margins are well-suited for several potent...
Pervasive fluid advection is indicated in the geochemical depth profiles at four locations (five sit...
The recent discovery of active methane venting along the US northern and mid-Atlantic margin represe...
Carbonate precipitates on mounds and along tectonic scarps off the Costa Rica margin are manifestati...
Active fluid venting and carbonate formation occur in the accretionary prism in the Cascadia subduct...
Authigenic carbonates from cold seeps are unique archives for studying environmental conditions, inc...
The occurrence of secondary carbonate deposit within limestone fissures, called "endostromatolites",...
Methane seepage leads to Mg-calcite and aragonite precipitation at a depth of 4,850 m on the Aleutia...
Methane-derived authigenic carbonates (MDACs) were collected around the largest pockmark on Umitaka ...
A study of the chemistry of pore fluids and authigenic carbonates in Chemical Geology 220 (2005) 329...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2007. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...