Biomineralization is a generic term used to indicate biological-mediated mineral formation. In carbonate mineralization, nucleation of crystals can be: (1) controlled directly by the organisms, like in the skeletal formation of most metazoans; (2) induced by microbial communities, by indirect precipitation mediated by their metabolic activities; or (3) influenced by organic matter decay, with mineral precipitation on specific non-living organic cell surfaces. Recognition of these products is a direct marker of biological activity in time and space and is a key element in the study of the biological evolution and of its interactions with the geological processes. In this paper, primary carbonate cements from the Anisian microbial build-up of the ‘Monte Facito’ Formation (Basilicata region, Southern Italy) have been studied from a geobiological point of view. Optical microscopy, UV-epifluorescence and micro-Raman spectroscopy have been applied to investigate the organic mediation on their precipitation. The cements formed in microcavities or on grain substrates, and often show a microstromatolite-like pattern of growth. They are composed of alternations of cloudy organic and whitish inorganic bands that point to a double phase of mineralization. In the first phase, a biologically induced/influenced biomineralization is confirmed by the presence of organic matter strictly connected with the cloudy bands. This phase is followed by a pure abiotic mineralization that leads to the formation of whitish bands. This process repeated cyclically, ending at the complete filling of the microcavities or because of changes in the chemical conditions of the microsystem, for example, due to burial processes. This model of mineralization is similar to that proposed for primary cements forming in recent beach rocks. The Monte Facito Formation cements could be considered as the product of unconventional biomineralization, and the understanding of their growth process could provide an innovative tool in the research of biological signatures in the fossil record. The term unconventional is here utilized to discriminate this type of biomineralizations from those related to well-known biotic mineralization processes, like those involved in skeletons and microbialites growth, which can be considered as conventional biomineralizations.
Biomineralization of primary carbonate cements: a new biosignature in the fossil record from the Anisian of Southern Italy / Guido, A.; Sposato, M.; Palladino, G.; Vescogni, A.; Miriello, D.. - In: LETHAIA. - ISSN 0024-1164. - (2021), pp. 1-21. [10.1111/let.12450]
Biomineralization of primary carbonate cements: a new biosignature in the fossil record from the Anisian of Southern Italy
Vescogni A.;
2021
Abstract
Biomineralization is a generic term used to indicate biological-mediated mineral formation. In carbonate mineralization, nucleation of crystals can be: (1) controlled directly by the organisms, like in the skeletal formation of most metazoans; (2) induced by microbial communities, by indirect precipitation mediated by their metabolic activities; or (3) influenced by organic matter decay, with mineral precipitation on specific non-living organic cell surfaces. Recognition of these products is a direct marker of biological activity in time and space and is a key element in the study of the biological evolution and of its interactions with the geological processes. In this paper, primary carbonate cements from the Anisian microbial build-up of the ‘Monte Facito’ Formation (Basilicata region, Southern Italy) have been studied from a geobiological point of view. Optical microscopy, UV-epifluorescence and micro-Raman spectroscopy have been applied to investigate the organic mediation on their precipitation. The cements formed in microcavities or on grain substrates, and often show a microstromatolite-like pattern of growth. They are composed of alternations of cloudy organic and whitish inorganic bands that point to a double phase of mineralization. In the first phase, a biologically induced/influenced biomineralization is confirmed by the presence of organic matter strictly connected with the cloudy bands. This phase is followed by a pure abiotic mineralization that leads to the formation of whitish bands. This process repeated cyclically, ending at the complete filling of the microcavities or because of changes in the chemical conditions of the microsystem, for example, due to burial processes. This model of mineralization is similar to that proposed for primary cements forming in recent beach rocks. The Monte Facito Formation cements could be considered as the product of unconventional biomineralization, and the understanding of their growth process could provide an innovative tool in the research of biological signatures in the fossil record. The term unconventional is here utilized to discriminate this type of biomineralizations from those related to well-known biotic mineralization processes, like those involved in skeletons and microbialites growth, which can be considered as conventional biomineralizations.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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