3.6 Powdery Dolomite
Powdery dolomites are fine-medium- coarse
powdery crystals, semi-euhedral and euhedral. They
contain varying amounts of foraminifers, fuzulinid,
ostracods, gastropods, lamellibranch, trilobite,
echinoderms and algae, ranging from 12% to 70%,
and mostly fragments and remnants often dissolved
into casted mold pores. Shell walls of a small
portion of gastropods,
echinoderms, ostracods are still calcite. Most
foraminifera and fuzulinid species are remnants of
debris due to dolomization and dissolution. Those
well preserved are bradyid, paleobraspora and
internal worms, and casted molds of chlorella,
ostracods and lamellibranch, and occasional
occurrence of echinacea fragments. Locally, there
observed chlorophyta lumps filled with coarse
calcite after dissolution, and large caves completely
filled with deformed dolomite and lapis lazuli. In
addition, a small amount of anhydrite was found
from two origins: the anhydrite replacing biological
debris, which shows wave absorption, and the
single-crystal anhydrite filling into biological
molded pores. Dissolved fractures semi-filled with
anhydrite can also be observed. More gypsum
molded pores were found, rectangular, cylindrical or
like bar and other shapes (Figure 7).
Coarse podwery dolomite
Residual foraminifer powdery
dolomite
Figure 7: Powdery dolomite.
From the point of more shallow water organisms,
the powdery crystalline should be subtidal deposits.
The occurrence of a small amount of gypsum salt
indicates that the sea water was salinized. That is,
the powdery crystalline was formed by the
dolomization of biological marl deposited in the
subtidal saline lagoon in a restricted platform (Ma,
1999), and it was not formed in a supratidal Sabkha
environment (Zhao et al., 2016).
3.7 Lime (lime-bearing) Dolomite
The lime (lime-bearing) dolomite is mainly of
micritic structure, with sparse distribution of
deepwater organisms, including monactines, thin-
shell organisms, echinoderm fragments and
phosphorus bioclastics. The distribution of calcite is
more uniform, but that of echinacea and fuzulinid is
not uniform, and a few echinacea have the
phenomenon of coaxial growth. A few of fuzulinid
were replaced by calcite. It shows strongly
fragmented organism, less in amount, and more in
kingdoms, with the observation of trilobite
fragments and tail thorns, and bryozoans,
brachiopods, echinoderms and the likes. What is
extremely peculiar is that there are both the
occurrence of tabular and columnar pseudo-crystals
of gypsum, and that of monactines and thin-shell
creatures. Also, there is the observation of normal
shallow marine creatures. The dolomite is divided
into two types, marlite and powdery crystalline,
which are distributed disorderly. The biological
burrow structure can be observed, representing ditch,
stream, rooted and other shapes. All micrites are
calcite, and powdery crystallines are semi-euhedral
and euhedral. The content of dolomite is equivalent
to that of lime, forming a transitional lithology. In
the micrite, there are occasional occurrences of the
remnants of echinoderm, fuzulinid and foraminifer.
The replacement of chalcedony and gypsum (with
wave absorption) can be observed locally. The
breccia with a suspected genesis of biological
burrowing or disturbance can also be observed and
the dolomitization is not uniform. In the place where
deformation is strong, found powdery dolomite and
lime dolomite. In the place where replacement is
weak, found dolomitic limestone, marlite, and
sparsely distributed brachiopoda, porous bryozoans,
echinoderms, fuzulinid, foraminifera fragments, and
occasionally phosphorus bio-shaped barbed. The
micritic structure contains coarser coral fragments,
monactines and triactines. With normal shallow
marine organisms, the lime (lime-bearing) dolomite
should be formed by incomplete dolomization of
deposits in restricted shallow sea (lagoon) (Figure 8).