Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories

Diagenetic histories of Proterozoic and Paleozoic carbonate strata on Victoria Island, in the Canadian arctic, are poorly understood, and their potential to be associated with base metals or petroleum is unknown. Using fluid inclusion and geochemical techniques, it was determined that the diagenetic...

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Main Author: Mathieu, Jordan-Paul
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Laurentian University of Sudbury 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2134
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spelling ftlaurentian:oai:zone.biblio.laurentian.ca:10219/2134 2023-08-20T04:04:40+02:00 Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories Mathieu, Jordan-Paul 2014-03-17 application/pdf https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2134 en eng Laurentian University of Sudbury https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2134 carbonate diagenesis fluid origin fluid inclusion Victoria Island Thesis 2014 ftlaurentian 2023-07-31T10:21:17Z Diagenetic histories of Proterozoic and Paleozoic carbonate strata on Victoria Island, in the Canadian arctic, are poorly understood, and their potential to be associated with base metals or petroleum is unknown. Using fluid inclusion and geochemical techniques, it was determined that the diagenetic fluid compositions of two major carbonate units, the Wynniatt Formation and the “Victoria Island formation”, were largely controlled by fluid-rock reactions in reservoirs and by mixing of multiple fluids. Diagenesis of the Wynniatt Formation resulted from the progression from a shale-dominant fluid mixture to a meteoric-dominant mixture. Fluid composition of “Victoria Island formation” was a shale-dominant mixture. A change in fluid:rock from low to high was recorded during diagenesis of both units. Metals and hydrocarbons transported to the study sites were ac-quired by the fluids during interaction with the respective source reservoirs. Mixing of diagenetic fluids follows the established ‘mixing model’ used to explain many other min-eralised locations. The diagenetic fluids that affected the strata in this study were compa-rable to those that produced the Polaris Zn-Pb deposit. This similarity suggests that there is potential for mineralisation on Victoria Island. Master of Science (MSc) in Geology Thesis Arctic Northwest Territories Victoria Island LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University Arctic Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University
op_collection_id ftlaurentian
language English
topic carbonate diagenesis
fluid origin
fluid inclusion
Victoria Island
spellingShingle carbonate diagenesis
fluid origin
fluid inclusion
Victoria Island
Mathieu, Jordan-Paul
Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories
topic_facet carbonate diagenesis
fluid origin
fluid inclusion
Victoria Island
description Diagenetic histories of Proterozoic and Paleozoic carbonate strata on Victoria Island, in the Canadian arctic, are poorly understood, and their potential to be associated with base metals or petroleum is unknown. Using fluid inclusion and geochemical techniques, it was determined that the diagenetic fluid compositions of two major carbonate units, the Wynniatt Formation and the “Victoria Island formation”, were largely controlled by fluid-rock reactions in reservoirs and by mixing of multiple fluids. Diagenesis of the Wynniatt Formation resulted from the progression from a shale-dominant fluid mixture to a meteoric-dominant mixture. Fluid composition of “Victoria Island formation” was a shale-dominant mixture. A change in fluid:rock from low to high was recorded during diagenesis of both units. Metals and hydrocarbons transported to the study sites were ac-quired by the fluids during interaction with the respective source reservoirs. Mixing of diagenetic fluids follows the established ‘mixing model’ used to explain many other min-eralised locations. The diagenetic fluids that affected the strata in this study were compa-rable to those that produced the Polaris Zn-Pb deposit. This similarity suggests that there is potential for mineralisation on Victoria Island. Master of Science (MSc) in Geology
format Thesis
author Mathieu, Jordan-Paul
author_facet Mathieu, Jordan-Paul
author_sort Mathieu, Jordan-Paul
title Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories
title_short Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories
title_full Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories
title_fullStr Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on Victoria Island, Northwest Territories
title_sort characteristics of diagenetic fluids affecting two major carbonate units on victoria island, northwest territories
publisher Laurentian University of Sudbury
publishDate 2014
url https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2134
geographic Arctic
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Arctic
Northwest Territories
genre Arctic
Northwest Territories
Victoria Island
genre_facet Arctic
Northwest Territories
Victoria Island
op_relation https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2134
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