Biomineralization, taphonomy, and diagenesis of Paleozoic lingulide brachiopod shells preserved in silicified mudstone concretions
Carolina Zabini, James D. Schiffbauer, Shuhai Xiao, Michal Kowalewski
ARTIGO
Inglês
Agradecimentos: Research was funded by CNPq (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico-Brazil; process 201147/2009-2) to CZ, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Exobiology and Evolutionary Biology Program and the Virginia Tech Institute for Critical Technology...
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Agradecimentos: Research was funded by CNPq (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico-Brazil; process 201147/2009-2) to CZ, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Exobiology and Evolutionary Biology Program and the Virginia Tech Institute for Critical Technology and Applied Science Nanoscale Characterization and Fabrication Laboratory to JDS and SX. MK thanks NSF (grants OCE-0602375, EAR-0920075, and EAR-1053433) for continuous support of his research program. The authors would additionally like to thank C.L. Tyler for helpful comments on earlier drafts of the manuscript, and C.E. Brett and an anonymous reviewer for constructive feedback that improved the quality of this report
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Abstract: Exceptionally preserved Devonian lingulides, found in spherical-to-subspherical mudstone concretions (Paraná Basin, Brazil), were analyzed using an electron microscopy-based approach (scanning electron microscopy, secondary and backscattered electron imaging) augmented with...
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Abstract: Exceptionally preserved Devonian lingulides, found in spherical-to-subspherical mudstone concretions (Paraná Basin, Brazil), were analyzed using an electron microscopy-based approach (scanning electron microscopy, secondary and backscattered electron imaging) augmented with semi-quantitative elemental analyses (energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy). Elemental composition, spatial biomineralization gradients, microstructural details, and growth banding patterns are similar to those observed in live-collected lingulid brachiopods (Glottidia palmeri and Lingula sp.). These parallels suggest a faithful preservation of primary biomineralization and microstructure in the Devonian lingulides. While our results suggest that physicochemical aspects of lingulide shells have been conserved throughout their evolutionary history, comparisons of carbon and phosphorus elemental maps and transects indicate that the Devonian lingulides may have been more extensively biomineralized than their present-day relatives, a pattern suggestive of their greater intrinsic fossilization potential. These Devonian shells, some of which are preserved in situ and in interpreted life position (with both valves intact and oriented vertically relative to bedding), tend to be associated with pyrite and rarer sphalerite grains at much higher concentrations than the surrounding matrix. This localized sulfide-mineral enrichment suggests that organic-rich lingulide shells may have acted as focal zones for bacterial sulfate reduction, resulting in degradation of the shell-associated organics and enhanced sulfide mineral precipitation. In addition to sulfide minerals, barite is also observed in direct proximity to the surfaces of some lingulide shells. Their in-situ preservation indicates rapid burial and a lack of reworking, and the early-diagenetic precipitation of sulfide and sulfate minerals suggests microbially-mediated authigenic processes in an anoxic microenvironment. In addition, the presence of three-dimensionally preserved acanthomorphic acritarchs indicates that the concretions were likely lithified rapidly prior to the degradation and compaction of these comparatively labile organisms. This combination of sedimentological, microbial, and geochemical conditions may have enhanced preservation of the lingulide shells, conserving original microstructural and biomineral details, as well as the acritarch fossils. The data presented here indicate that concretion-hosted organo-phosphatic shells may offer an exceptional taphonomic view into lingulide biomineralization and taphonomic processes
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CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO - CNPQ
201147/2009-2
Fechado
Zabini, Carolina, 1983-
Autor
Schiffbauer, James D.
Autor
Xiao, Shuhai
Autor
Kowalewski, Michal
Autor
Biomineralization, taphonomy, and diagenesis of Paleozoic lingulide brachiopod shells preserved in silicified mudstone concretions
Carolina Zabini, James D. Schiffbauer, Shuhai Xiao, Michal Kowalewski
Biomineralization, taphonomy, and diagenesis of Paleozoic lingulide brachiopod shells preserved in silicified mudstone concretions
Carolina Zabini, James D. Schiffbauer, Shuhai Xiao, Michal Kowalewski
Fontes
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Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology (Fonte avulsa) |