Data for: Three-Dimensional Morphometry of Ooids in Oolites: a new tool for more accurate and precise paleoenvironmental interpretation

Howes, Bolton; Mehra, Akshay; Maloof, Adam
Issue date: 22 February 2021
Cite as:
Howes, Bolton, Mehra, Akshay, & Maloof, Adam. (2021). Data for: Three-Dimensional Morphometry of Ooids in Oolites: a new tool for more accurate and precise paleoenvironmental interpretation [Data set]. Princeton University. https://doi.org/10.34770/4ycs-g270
@electronic{howes_bolton_2021,
  author      = {Howes, Bolton and
                Mehra, Akshay and
                Maloof, Adam},
  title       = {{Data for: Three-Dimensional Morphometry
                of Ooids in Oolites: a new tool for more
                 accurate and precise paleoenvironmental
                 interpretation}},
  publisher   = {{Princeton University}},
  year        = 2021,
  url         = {https://doi.org/10.34770/4ycs-g270}
}
Abstract:

The prevalence of ooids in the stratigraphic record, and their association with shallow-water carbonate environments, make ooids an important paleoenvironmental indicator. Recent advances in the theoretical understanding of ooid morphology, along with empirical studies from Turks and Caicos, Great Salt Lake, and The Bahamas, have demonstrated that the morphology of ooids is indicative of depositional environment and hydraulic conditions. To apply this knowledge from modern environments to the stratigraphic record of Earth history, researchers measure the size and shape of lithified ooids on two-dimensional surfaces (i.e., thin sections or polished slabs), often assuming that random 2D slices intersect the nuclei and that the orientation of the ooids is known. Here we demonstrate that these assumptions rarely are true, resulting in errors of up to 35% on metrics like major axis length. We present a method for making 3D reconstructions by serial grinding and imaging, which enables accurate measurement of the morphology of individual ooids within an oolite, as well as the sorting and porosity of a sample. We also provide three case studies that use the morphology of ooids in oolites to extract environmental information. Each case study demonstrates that 2D measurements can be useful if the environmental signal is large relative to the error from 2D measurements. However, 3D measurements substantially improve the accuracy and precision of environmental interpretations. This study focuses on oolites, but errors from 2D measurements are not unique to oolites; this method can be used to extract accurate grain and porosity measurements from any lithified granular sample.

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Description:

This dataset is too large to download directly from this item page. You can access and download the data via Globus at this link: https://app.globus.org/file-manager?origin_id=dc43f461-0ca7-4203-848c-33a9fc00a464&origin_path=%2F4ycs-g270%2F (See https://docs.globus.org/how-to/get-started/ for instructions on how to use Globus; sign-in is required). The data files consist of 2 3D models of segmented oolites in .raw format and 2 corresponding image stacks in .tif format. Please refer to the README file for more details.

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