Limestones: an essential user guide to sediments that dissolve, precipitate and grow

Professor Cathy Hollis – University of Manchester

Carbonate sedimentary rocks form through the accumulation of organisms and chemically precipitated calcium carbonate, usually on the sea floor. They preserve fragments of marine organisms, which are sensitive to temperature, salinity and seawater chemistry during their growth, and they therefore provide an exceptional record of evolutionary and climatic change through Earth’s history. Carbonate sediments are also highly reactive, dissolving and precipitating in surface water. For these reasons, despite their simple mineralogy, they have a reputation for being difficult to understand and many clastic sedimentologists approach them with caution! Nevertheless, carbonate sedimentary rocks are important for many reasons. They have been exploited for millenia for their minerals, water resources and, more recently, for cement, roadstone and hydrocarbon. Now, as we face the effects of climate change, we can use carbonate strata to understand how Earth responds to environmental stress and use this knowledge to better predict the effect of climate change on modern ecosystems. There is also growing interest in how carbonate sedimentary rocks can be used to good effect for carbon storage and geothermal heat production. This talk will provide an introduction to ‘novices’ of carbonate sedimentology to the principle processes that govern their formation and modification during lithification. It will illustrate their importance to our modern landscape and heritage and demonstrate how ancient carbonate systems can hold warnings, and solutions, to the effects of anthropogenic environmental impact.