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Formation of Siderite in Microbial Microcosms Derived from a Marine Sediment

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Version 2 2020-04-13, 16:28
Version 1 2020-02-19, 14:23
journal contribution
posted on 2020-04-13, 16:28 authored by Aysha Kamran, Dominik Schneider, Vladimir Roddatis, Volker Thiel, Michael Hoppert

Exceptionally well-preserved fossils are frequently encased by carbonate concretions. The initial steps of their formation in marine and freshwater sediments are induced by microbial activity. The role of the involved microbial communities, however, is not well understood. In this study, siderite (FeCO3) formation in microbial microcosms is observed, with various fatty acyl compounds (lipids, surfactants) as substrates and Wadden Sea sediment samples as inocula. In actively growing microcosms, sulfate-reducing bacteria (the genus Desulfofrigus in particular) dominate the microbial community and submicroscopic siderite precipitates on bacterial cell surfaces were identified. We suggest that these biologically induced mineralization processes may, in the natural environment, initiate the formation of large concretions under suboxic conditions in coastal sediments.

Funding

This study was financially supported by the German Research Foundation [Th 713/12-1].

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