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Creators/Authors contains: "Demicco, Robert V"

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  1. Lacustrine evaporites have potential to document ancient terrestrial climates, including temperatures and their seasonal variations, and atmospheric pCO2. The sodium carbonate mineral nahcolite (NaHCO3) in the early Eocene Parachute Creek Member, Green River Formation, Piceance subbasin, indicates elevated pCO2 concentrations (> 680 ppm) in the water column and in the atmosphere if in contact with brine. These data support a causal connection between elevated atmospheric pCO2 and global warmth during the early Eocene Climatic Optimum. Trona (Na2CO3⋅NaHCO3⋅2H2O), not nahcolite, is the dominant sodium carbonate mineral in the coeval Wilkins Peak Member in the Bridger subbasin, which may be explained by interbasin variations in (1) brine chemistry, (2) temperature, and (3) pCO2. These interpretations are based on equilibrium thermodynamics and simulations that evaporate lake water, but they ignore seasonal changes in water column temperature and pCO2. Winter cooling, rather than evaporative concentration, best explains the fine-scale alternations of nahcolite, halite (NaCl), and nahcolite + halite in the Parachute Creek Member. Simulated evaporation of alkaline source waters from the paleo Aspen River at temperatures between 15⁰ and 27⁰ C and pCO2 at or below 1200 ppm produces the observed mineral sequence in the Wilkins Peak Member: gaylussite (Na2CO3⋅CaCO3⋅5H2O) at temperatures < 27⁰ C and pirssonite (Na2CO3⋅CaCO3⋅2H2O) > 27⁰ C (both now replaced by shortite Na2CO3·2CaCO3), then northupite (Na3Mg(CO3)2Cl), trona, and halite. The challenge of determining paleo-lake temperatures in the Bridger and Piceance subbasins using microthermometry has now been solved using femtosecond lasers that promote nucleation of vapor bubbles in brine inclusions without deforming the halite host crystal. This method shows general agreement with thermodynamic-based calculations and will be used to document mean annual temperatures in the Greater Green River Basin. 
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Abstract Halite precipitates in the Dead Sea during winter but re-dissolves above the thermocline upon summer warming, “focusing” halite deposition below the thermocline (Sirota et al., 2016, 2017, 2018). Here we develop an “evaporite focusing” model for evaporites (nahcolite + halite) preserved in a restricted area of the Eocene Green River Formation in the Piceance Creek Basin of Colorado, USA. Nahcolite solubility is dependent on partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) as well as temperature (T), so these models covary with both T and pCO2. In the lake that filled the Piceance Creek Basin, halite, nahcolite or mixtures of both could have precipitated during winter cooling, depending on the CO2 content in different parts of the lake. Preservation of these minerals occurs below the thermocline (>∼25 m) in deeper portions of the basin. Our modeling addresses both: (1) the restriction of evaporites in the Piceance Creek Basin to the center of the basin without recourse to later dissolution and (2) the variable mineralogy of the evaporites without recourse to changes in lake water chemistry. T from 20 to 30 °C and pCO2 between 1800 and 2800 ppm are reasonable estimates for the conditions in the Piceance Creek Basin paleolake. Other evaporites occur in the center of basins but do not extend out to the edges of the basin. Evaporite focusing caused by summer-winter T changes in the solubility of the minerals should be considered for such deposits and variable pCO2 within the evaporating brines also needs to be considered if pCO2 sensitive minerals are found. 
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  3. Abstract Modern and ancient lacustrine carbonate build‐ups provide uniquely sensitive sedimentary and geochemical records for understanding the interaction between tectonics, past climates, and local and regional scale basin hydrology. Large (metre to decametre), well‐developed carbonate mounds in the Green River Formation have long been recognized along the margins of an Eocene lake, known as Lake Gosiute. However, their mode of origin and significance with respect to palaeohydrology remain controversial. Here, new sedimentological, Sr isotope data and structural evidence show that significant spring discharge led to the formation of a decametre size complex of shoreline carbonate mounds in the upper Wilkins Peak Member of the Green River Formation at Little Mesa and adjacent areas in the Bridger Basin, Wyoming, USA. Sedimentological evidence indicates that spring discharge was predominantly subaqueous but was, at times, also subaerial, which produced tufa cascades and micro‐rimstone dam structures. The87Sr/86Sr ratios measured from these subaerial spring deposits are less radiogenic (87Sr/86Sr = 0.71040 to 0.71101) than contemporaneous palaeolake carbonates (87Sr/86Sr = 0.71195 to 0.71561) because their parent groundwaters likely interacted with less‐radiogenic Palaeozoic carbonate. Calcite‐cemented sandstone cones and spires (87Sr/86Sr = 0.71037 to 0.71057) in the Wasatch Formation directly below the spring deposits suggest that groundwaters derived from Palaeozoic carbonates preferentially flowed along thrust faults. These results imply that high spring discharge coincided with lake high stands of the upper Wilkins Peak Member, suggesting that recharge at the north‐west margin of the Bridger Basin contributed to Lake Gosiute’s water budget and lowered the salinity of an underfilled, evaporative lake basin. The findings of this study provide criteria for the recognition of groundwater discharge in palaeolake systems which may lead to the discovery of palaeospring systems in other ancient lake deposits. 
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