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The Pliocene-age Stirone River hydrocarbon chemoherm complex (Northern Apennines, Italy)

The Stirone River section in the Italian Northern Apennines hosts a rare example of Pliocene age hydrocarbon-imprinted carbonates in the Mediterranean Basin associated with deep-water hemipelagic lithologies. These include meter-sized, dolomite-cemented chimneys, micritic brecciated limestones, luci...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine and petroleum geology 2015-09, Vol.66, p.582-595
Main Authors: Cau, S., Franchi, F., Roveri, M., Taviani, M.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The Stirone River section in the Italian Northern Apennines hosts a rare example of Pliocene age hydrocarbon-imprinted carbonates in the Mediterranean Basin associated with deep-water hemipelagic lithologies. These include meter-sized, dolomite-cemented chimneys, micritic brecciated limestones, lucina-mudstones and chemosymbiotic bivalve shells. Some such chimneys show δ13C values as low as −37.5‰ VPDB, suggesting subsurface precipitation of authigenic dolomite induced by anaerobic oxidation of methane triggered by consortia of sulphate reducing bacteria. These carbonates are interpreted as part of the plumbing system related to hydrocarbon expulsion onto the seafloor, resulting from hydrocarbon-enriched defluidization processes dated at an interval at 3.6–3.3 Ma and associated with the thrust-related “Salsomaggiore structure”. •We present one of the few known cases of a Pliocene-age deep-water seep carbonate system.•This complex system was fed through dolomitic chimneys and documents former hydrocarbon seepage onto the seafloor.•The expulsion of hydrocarbon deep-seated fluids conducive to authigenic carbonate formation has been dated 3.6 and 3.0 My.
ISSN:0264-8172
1873-4073
DOI:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2015.05.027