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Dive into the research topics where David Parcerisa is active.

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Featured researches published by David Parcerisa.


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2000

Hydrogeochemistry and diagenesis of Miocene sandstones at Montjuı̈c, Barcelona (Spain)

David Gómez-Gras; David Parcerisa; Klaus Bitzer; Francesc Calvet; E. Roca; Médard Thiry

Abstract Massive silicification of Miocene sandstones cropping out at the Montjuic mountain in Barcelona has been analyzed in order to constrain paleoflow systems, which may have contributed to the diagenetic reactions. The section consists of five units with alternating sandstone–marl units. The principal diagenetic features are observed in strongly silicified sandstone units. Alunite mineral precipitation indicates presence of saline fluids and low pH. Salinity is most probably derived from marine seawater and low pH may be due to oxidation of pyrite. A quantitative thermodynamic modeling is applied to characterize the percolating fluids and to constrain the hydrodynamic system.


Zeitschrift Fur Geomorphologie | 2010

Periglacial geomorphological evolution of the Fontainebleau Massif (France)

Médard Thiry; David Parcerisa; Marie Nieves Liron

The Fontainebleau Sand contains tightly cemented sandstone lenses, which form spectacular elongated ridges that are up to 10 km long and 0.5 km wide. Denudation of the sandstone pans leads to a highly contrasted landscape, with sandstone ridges towering over sandy depressions. However, little is known about the erosion processes that have built up this landscape. Periglacial processes, including aeolian ones, appear to have been significant in the development of the massifs physiography. The topography of the massif has played an important role in controlling the aeolian processes. The upwind westerly front face of the massif displays numerous deflation features, such as blowout hollows, high sandstone scarps with numerous overhangs and spectacular talus screen, and a wide uncovered sandstone plateaux. In the eastern downwind district the landforms are more subdued and the sandstone plateaux and their scarps are partly sanded up. Sand dunes have built up directly downwind from the westerly scarps. Further onto the plateaux, loess has been deposited in a relatively regular cover. Finally, in the low areas downwind from the plateaux, there are fine sand dune fields and loess covers. The layouts and arrangements inherited from the aeolian action partly command the present-day relief and the plant biodiversity. There are oak and beech groves on the aeolian calcareous sand deposits, birch and pine trees on the quartzose sand forming the upwind scarps, and wet peaty moors as well as dry moors with heather and birch on the uncovered sandstone plateaux. Thus, the landscape features inherited from the periglacial aeolian action contribute to the striking biodiversity of the Fontainebleau Massif.


Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry | 2017

Predicting instrumental mass fractionation (IMF) of stable isotope SIMS analyses by response surface methodology (RSM)

Carles Fabrega; David Parcerisa; J.M. Rossell; Andrey A. Gurenko; Christine Franke

Instrumental mass fractionation (IMF) of isotopic SIMS analyses (CAMECA 1280HR, CRPG Nancy) was predicted by response surface methodology (RSM) for the 18O/16O determination of plagioclase, K-feldspar, and quartz. The three predictive response surface models combined instrumental and compositional inputs. The instrumental parameters were: (i) X and Y stage positions, (ii) the values of LT1DefX and LT1DefY electrostatic deflectors, (iii) chamber pressure, and (iv) primary-ion beam intensity. The compositional inputs included: (i) anorthite content (An%) for the plagioclase model, and (ii) orthoclase (Or%) and barium (BaO%) contents for the K-feldspar model. The three models exhibited high predictive power. The coefficients R2 and prediction-R2 were, respectively, 90.47% and 86.74% for plagioclase, 87.56% and 83.17% for K-feldspar, and 94.29% and 91.59% for quartz. The results show that RSM can be confidently applied to IMF prediction in stable isotope SIMS analyses by the use of instrumental and compositional variables.


Bulletin De La Societe Geologique De France | 2001

Proposition d'un modele de silicification superficielle des gres neogenes de Montjuic, Barcelone (Espagne); parageneses minerales, environments geochimiques et circulation des fluides

David Parcerisa; Médard Thiry; David Gómez-Gras; Francesc Calvet

The Montjuic hill is part of the Neogene horst and graben system of the Catalan Coastal Ranges at the northwestern edge of the Valencia Trough. It is located to the SE of Barcelona City and consists of a 200 m thick strongly silicified detrital succession (mainly conglomerate and sandstone units alternating with lutitic units) of Miocene age. The geological constraints of this area (young age, shallow depositional environment and no evidence of burial processes) ensure that authigenic minerals formed during silicification have not been modified by further diagenetic processes and allow to constrain the age and nature of the silicification. Silicification has strongly increased the hardness of the original sediment. Textural effects of mechanical compaction are rare, testifying that burial processes had no effect on diagenesis and pointing towards an early and/or shallow cementation. Two main diagenetic facies with characteristic associations of authigenic minerals can be identified, namely: (1) non silicified facies are present in ochre-coloured, fine-grained sandstones with high clay and carbonate content. In these facies, cementation is scarce and generally forms minor feldspar overgrowths around detrital K-feldspar as well as layers or nodules of calcite spar cement mainly filling interparticle porosity; (2) silicified facies are red, purple-coloured and characterized by the presence of opal, microquartz and quartz overgrowths as well as other minor authigenic minerals such as Ti and Fe oxides and alunite. Particularly, alunite and opal appear often at the boundary of the silicified/non silicified facies, coming with the development of bleached facies and are replaced by silica. In this paper, a detailed sampling of the silicification fronts has been made, in order to establish the main silicification pathways. In the sampled zone the non silicified sandstones are mainly made up of quartz, K-feldspar, muscovite, phyllite fragments and bioclasts and cemented by thin K-feldspar overgrowths and decimetric concretions of intergranular calcite spar with spherical and tabular shapes. Sandstones contain some pyrite pseudomorphs and 20 to 30% of clay minerals, essentially illite-mica. Samples collected perpendicular to the silicification fronts reveal significant textural, compositional and petrographical transformations, namely: (1) The color of the sample varies strongly from ochre in the non silicified facies to white and red in the bleached weakly silicified front and finally to red, purple and grey in the massively silicified facies; (2) The siliciclastic framework of Montjuic sandstones remains stable during the silicification, only detrital feldspars are partially altered into illite, and biotites are completely altered. The detrital carbonate components disappear quickly towards silicified facies; (3) Within the silicification front, either bleached or not, authigenic minerals show quite important variability. Calcite disappears progressively. The first silicification stage is built by incipient quartz overgrowths, then microquartz develops towards the massively silicified facies. Alunite and opal are usually present in samples collected in this silicification boundary; (4) In the massively silicified facies quartz overgrowths and microquartz take up almost all the intergranular volume of sandstones. Clay content is strongly reduced to 5-10% (mainly illite), so the primary clay-carbonate matrix has been replaced and/or transformed to microquartz. Iron oxides appear around feldspar and phyllite fragments. Because of the geological constraints Montjuic sandstones silicification was a surface/sub-surface phenomenon. Therefore, silicification occurred at relatively low temperature and pressure conditions. Partly, silica may have an internal origin (supplied by clay and feldspar hydrolysis). Supposing that diagenetic transformations inside sandstones are made at steady state conditions it is necessary to consider a strong external supply of silica. The presence of alunite points to acidic fluids with pH between 1,5 and 4. In these conditions, quartz solubility is unaffected, but the aluminium becomes mobile, thus aluminosilicate minerals (like feldspars) are hydrolyzed and clay minerals are transformed into opal CT. A feasible process which may have contributed to the acidification is the oxidation of the pyrite and organic matter present in the original sediments, testified by numerous pyrite ghosts in the non silicified and silicified sandstones. Silicification occurred in an oxidizing environment where sulfides were oxidized and iron oxides precipitated, explaining the colour of these materials. At the basin scale, different models can be considered: (a) a topographic driven flow that moved groundwater from the horst towards the basin; (b) a thermoconvective driven flow that moved phreatic and formation waters along the main faults of the graben or (c) a compaction driven flow that also moved formation waters. Only shallow systems driven by topographic flows can explain the oxidizing nature of the silicification solutions of Montjuic. Conclusions. The Montjuic sandstone silicification is remarkable in several aspects. (1) The lack of compaction and the oxidizing nature of the silicification indicate that this diagenesis was induced by subsurface groundwater, in shallow environments. (2) Silicification is pervasive in medium and coarse-grained sandstones and conglomerates. On the contrary, silicification is restricted to fracture zones in fine-grained sandstones.


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2007

Triassic magnetic overprints related to albitization in granites from the Morvan massif (France)

Caroline Ricordel; David Parcerisa; Médard Thiry; Marie G. Moreau; David Gómez-Gras


International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2010

Albitisation related to the Triassic unconformity in igneous rocks of the Morvan Massif (France)

David Parcerisa; Médard Thiry; Jean-Michel Schmitt


Geofluids | 2009

Migration of Mn‐rich fluids through normal faults and fine‐grained terrigenous sediments during early development of the Neogene Vallès‐Penedès half‐graben (NE Spain)

Anna Travé; E. Roca; Elisabet Playà; David Parcerisa; David Gómez-Gras; J. D. Martín-Martín


Sedimentary Geology | 2005

A model of early calcite cementation in alluvial fans: Evidence from the Burdigalian sandstones and limestones of the Vallès-Penedès half-graben (NE Spain)

David Parcerisa; David Gómez-Gras; Anna Travé


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2006

Fe and Mn in calcites cementing red beds: A record of oxidation–reduction conditions: Examples from the Catalan Coastal Ranges (NE Spain)

David Parcerisa; David Gómez-Gras; Anna Travé; J.D. Martín-Martín; E. Maestro


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2006

Conditions of kaolin illitization in the Permo-Triassic sandstones from the SE Iberian Ranges, Spain

J.D. Martín-Martín; David Gómez-Gras; T. Sanfeliu; Albert Permanyer; J.A. Núñez; David Parcerisa

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David Gómez-Gras

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Anna Travé

University of Barcelona

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E. Roca

University of Barcelona

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