A buried travertine deposit, identified in a well at Prima Porta (to the north west of Rome, Italy), was investigated using a multidisciplinary approach that included stable isotope geochemistry, mineralogy, petrography and radiometric dating. The travertine body is located just along the western boundary of the Tiber valley, a morpho-tectonic depression of extensional origin; it is associated with the rise of a deep-seated, hypothermal, saline, CO-rich fluid. The depositional environment was inferred by the macroscopic features of core and microfacies analysis, which suggested that travertine deposition was associated with a low to moderate energy environment, such as gently-dipping, shallow pools on low-angle, terraced slopes. A hydrothermal system, characterised by long circulation paths at depth, and deeply derived CO-dominated fluids, are supported by geochemical analyses. According to radiometric dating, travertine deposition occurred from between 53.5 ± 10 ka to 24.2 ± 4.7 ka; the activation of the travertine-depositing spring was probably coeval with the wettest climatic conditions occurring during MIS3, whereas the end of deposition coincides with the cold and arid phase of the last glacial maximum.
Multidisciplinary characterization of the buried travertine body of Prima Porta (Central Italy)
Giustini F;Brilli M;Di Salvo C;Mancini M;Voltaggio M
2020
Abstract
A buried travertine deposit, identified in a well at Prima Porta (to the north west of Rome, Italy), was investigated using a multidisciplinary approach that included stable isotope geochemistry, mineralogy, petrography and radiometric dating. The travertine body is located just along the western boundary of the Tiber valley, a morpho-tectonic depression of extensional origin; it is associated with the rise of a deep-seated, hypothermal, saline, CO-rich fluid. The depositional environment was inferred by the macroscopic features of core and microfacies analysis, which suggested that travertine deposition was associated with a low to moderate energy environment, such as gently-dipping, shallow pools on low-angle, terraced slopes. A hydrothermal system, characterised by long circulation paths at depth, and deeply derived CO-dominated fluids, are supported by geochemical analyses. According to radiometric dating, travertine deposition occurred from between 53.5 ± 10 ka to 24.2 ± 4.7 ka; the activation of the travertine-depositing spring was probably coeval with the wettest climatic conditions occurring during MIS3, whereas the end of deposition coincides with the cold and arid phase of the last glacial maximum.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.