EM - Escola de Minas

URI permanente desta comunidadehttp://www.hml.repositorio.ufop.br/handle/123456789/6

Notícias

A Escola de Minas de Ouro Preto foi fundada pelo cientista Claude Henri Gorceix e inaugurada em 12 de outubro de 1876.

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Resultados da Pesquisa

Agora exibindo 1 - 4 de 4
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    The rise and fall of the giant stromatolites of the Lower Permian Irati Formation (Paraná Basin, Brazil) : a multi-proxy based paleoenvironmental reconstruction.
    (2022) Antunes, Gonçalo Cruz; Warren, Lucas Veríssimo; Okubo, Juliana; Fairchild, Thomas Rich; Varejão, Filipe Giovanini; Uhlein, Gabriel Jubé; Inglez, Lucas; Poiré, Daniel Gustavo; Rumbelsperger, Anelize Manuela Bahniuk; Simões, Marcello Guimarães
    Giant stromatolites are meter-scale laminated carbonate biosedimentary deposits formed by the action of benthic microbiota under very specific conditions. Although occurrences of giant stromatolites are relatively common in Precambrian deposits, the Phanerozoic record is still sparse. Here, we carried out an integrated analysis of the Lower Permian Santa Rosa de Viterbo giant stromatolite field, developed in a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic depositional system within a restricted intracontinental basin (Irati Formation, Paran ́ a Basin, Brazil). Using available and new descriptions of stromatolite morphology and associated facies, we applied a multi-proxy approach based upon sedimentological, paleontological, geochemical, and isotopic data to develop a detailed paleoenvironmental model for this particular occurrence. The NE-SW elongated giant stromatolites – of >3 m in height, > 7 m in length, and > 1 m wide – have variable external shape and internal morphology, indicating changing growth strategy due to variations in the hydrodynamic conditions, bathymetry, and terrigenous input. Increasing δ13C values towards the top of the succession are related to intense microbial activity, increased nutrient supply, and enhanced primary productivity, with the higher δ13C values matching the global Permian seawater signal. Y/Ho and La/La* ratios indicate a less restricted setting towards the top of the succession, which is consistent with the increasing water depth recorded by the stromatolite morphology. The combination of smooth lamination, exclusively coccoidal microbial community, and fossil content, point to deposition under high (possibly hyper) salinity conditions for most of the succession. Our data suggests that the existence of stressful conditions (i.e., strong currents and high salinity) protected the benthic microbial communities from predation and favored EPS production, generating the ideal conditions for the growth of giant stromatolites, a very uncommon situation in the Phanerozoic.
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    Metallogenetic Mn-model of the Rhyacian-aged Buritirama Formation, Carajás domain (Amazon Craton).
    (2021) Salgado, Silas Santos; Caxito, Fabrício de Andrade; Silva, Rosaline Cristina Figueiredo e; Uhlein, Gabriel Jubé; Nogueira, Leonardo Brandão; Nalini Júnior, Hermínio Arias; Aranda, Ramon de Oliveira
    The Mn-bearing Buritirama Formation is composed of clastic and chemical metasedimentary rocks representing a Rhyacian platformal basin (ca. 2.18–2.06 Ga) that limits the northern border of the Archean-Paleoproterozoic Caraj ́ as domain with the Paleoproterozoic Bacaj ́ a domain in the southern Amazon Craton, northern Brazil. The Buritirama Formation is divided into three main stratigraphic units. The Lower and Upper units consist of a basal quartzite followed by carbonate–silicate rocks (marls), dolomitic marbles (dolostone) and minor biotite schist while the Intermediate Unit consists of Mn-carbonate rocks topped by a supergene Mn-oxide deposit (Cenozoic age). These rocks were deformed and metamorphosed during the Transamazonian event (ca. 2.06 Ga). Geochemical data from dolomitic marbles (Lower Unit) exhibit negative Ce anomalies, high Y/Ho ratios (ca. 48) and seawater-like REE + Y patterns that reinforce an open platform setting for the Buritirama basin. Positive δ13C values (+3.2‰ to +5.0‰ V-PDB) for dolomitic marbles are considered to be an expression of the Loma- gundi Carbon Isotopic Excursion. The metallogenesis of Mn-carbonate rocks is evaluated based on redox- sensitive trace elements (e.g. Zn and Ni), PAAS-normalized REE + Y patterns and δ13C values (− 2.56‰ to +0.15‰ V-PDB) and point out to a classical multi-stage redox-controlled Mn-model involving: i) a primary hydrothermal fluid source related to ocean vents and/or normal faults; ii) microbially-mediated reduction of Mn- oxides particles at the ocean bottom; and iii) reactions between Mn2+ and CO3 2− (organic matter and seawater related), giving rise to diagenetic Mn-carbonates. The Rhyacian age, Mn deposits, and presence of Lomagundi- like δ13C allows to correlate the Buritirama Formation with the Aguas ́ Claras Formation within the Caraj ́ as domain further south, thus establishing an important metalliferous event that was up to now largely overlooked within the southern Amazon Craton.
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    Evidences of seismic events during the sedimentation of Sete Lagoas Formation (Bambuí Group – Ediacaran, Brazil).
    (2020) Okubo, Juliana; Warren, Lucas Veríssimo; Luvizotto, George Luiz; Varejão, Filipe Giovanini; Quaglio, Fernanda; Uhlein, Gabriel Jubé; Assine, Mario Luis
    The Sete Lagoas Formation (Ediacaran), located in the central part of the São Francisco Craton (Brazil), consists of limestones and dolostones deposited in very shallow waters in the inner part of the carbonate platform. Four breccia types occur throughout the stratigraphic succession: evaporitic breccia with tepees, flat-pebble breccia, hydrothermal breccia and brecciated stromatolites. Here we combine a detailed sedimentological and strati- graphic analyses of the flat-pebble breccia in order to determine its origin and the processes and environmental conditions that originated these brecciated facies. The studied interval consists of a 20 m thick succession of tabular beds composed of flat-pebble breccia interbedded with laminated microbialites. In these breccia beds, the clasts are usually platy or oblate with angular edges and are mainly disposed horizontally within the sedi- mentary bed, suggesting that they were not transported or reworked. The presence of microbialite clasts with sharp edges and vertices in the Sete Lagoas flat-pebble breccia suggests that the lithification process started very early in diagenesis and, even the sediments exposed at the bottom were, at least, partially lithified. Some breccia levels show bidirectional imbrication and clast size analyses reveal a NE-SW long-axis clast orientation whereas square clasts tend to fill the space among oriented clasts. Breccia clasts are vertically oriented and show de- formation features increasing upwards, typically of deforming beds formed by ascendant expulsion of liquefied sediment. Disrupted layers or presenting folds and synsedimentary faults commonly occur confined between undeformed beds. Other evidences of liquefaction and soft-sediment deformation are the injection structures, as flame and load cast-like features, in the base of the brecciated beds. These structures commonly penetrate the upper bed and disrupt the sedimentary layer immediately above promoting local brecciation. These features are found both in modern and ancient deposits of seismic influence, which suggests a similar origin for the Sete Lagoas flat-pebble breccia. Thus, the processes that led to the formation of the studied flat-pebble breccia are interpreted as seismically triggered, since: a) the breccia beds are laterally continuous and extend for several kilometers; b) the breccia beds are restricted to a 20 m thick stratigraphic interval; c) the clasts of the breccia are the same lithology of non-deformed beds below and above the interval of breccia; d) the interbedding of breccia beds and laminated microbialite beds is recurrent; e) the breccia beds are subhorizontal and present irregular upper and lower contacts; f) the presence of liquefaction structures and dyke injection. Thus, this seismic-trig- gered breccia deposits represent the product of the synsedimentary tectonism occurred within the São Francisco Craton during the terminal Ediacaran and correspond to a very well-defined local stratigraphic marker in the Bambuí Basin. The seismic activities could be related to the NW regional faults in the regional Paleoproterozoic basement of the study area, which were reactivated during the deposition of the Sete Lagoas Formation in the Ediacaran Period.
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    The fate of a Neoproterozoic intracratonic marine basin : trace elements, TOC and IRON speciation geochemistry of the Bambuí Basin, Brazil.
    (2019) Hippertt, João Pedro Torrezani Martins; Caxito, Fabrício de Andrade; Uhlein, Gabriel Jubé; Nalini Júnior, Hermínio Arias; Sial, Alcides Nóbrega; Abreu, Adriana Trópia de; Nogueira, Leonardo Brandão
    Neoproterozoic marine systems are associated with major paleoecological changes that took place in the Ediacaran and during the Ediacaran-Cambrian transition. During this timespan, the Bambuí basin located on east Brazil held a peculiar paleoenvironmental scenario. Due to its intracratonic evolution, the basin was partially disconnected from neighboring open marine systems. This setting raises a very interesting opportunity to understand how an isolated Neoproterozoic marine system evolved in contrast with typical (globally connected) open marine systems. To understand the paleoenvironmental changes that took place in the Bambuí basin, we investigate the pre-glaciogenic deposits of the Carrancas Fm and the post-glaciogenic mixed (shale-carbonate) successions of the Bambuí Group. Through the analysis of iron speciation, TOC, trace element and C-O isotope systematics, our study suggests a very complex environmental evolution. Firstly, our samples are marked by strong contamination of detrital continental material that can be related to an increased bioproductivity on both the Carrancas Fm. and lower Bambuí group stratigraphic units, and provenance data show that all studied sediments probably shared common source areas. Iron speciation data, Ce anomalies and RSE enrichments shows that lower Bambuí Group stratigraphic units were likely deposited in an open marine scenario featuring high bioproductivity in shallow waters and euxinic incursions in predominant anoxic/ferruginous bottom waters. On the other hand, upper Bambuí stratigraphic units register a marine evolution in a restricted scenario, where anoxic ferruginous conditions probably reached surface waters. Finally, our data show that the lack of oceanic connection prevented the re-supply of marine sulfate, RSE, bionutrients and ultimately of dissolved oxygen which may have decreased biological activity and probably hindered biological evolution, preventing the rise of a typical modern-like Cambrian ecosystem. In this sense, our data suggest that oceanic connectivity and proper re-supply of inorganic marine input were important features in the development of complex life in the EdiacaranCambrian environment.