| Literature DB >> 33979014 |
Kelsey R Moore1, Jian Gong1, Mihkel Pajusalu1,2, Emilie J Skoog1, Megan Xu1, Tania Feliz Soto3, Victor Sojo4,5, Thomas Matreux5, Matthew J Baldes1, Dieter Braun5, Kenneth Williford6, Tanja Bosak1.
Abstract
Microbial fossils preserved by early diagenetic chert provide a window into the Proterozoic biosphere, but seawater chemistry, microbial processes, and the interactions between microbes and the environment that contributed to this preservation are not well constrained. Here, we use fossilization experiments to explore the processes that preserve marine cyanobacterial biofilms by the precipitation of amorphous silica in a seawater medium that is analogous to Proterozoic seawater. These experiments demonstrate that the exceptional silicification of benthic marine cyanobacteria analogous to the oldest diagnostic cyanobacterial fossils requires interactions among extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), photosynthetically induced pH changes, magnesium cations (Mg2+ ), and >70 ppm silica.Entities:
Keywords: Proterozoic; cyanobacteria; exopolymeric substances; magnesium; silicification
Year: 2021 PMID: 33979014 DOI: 10.1111/gbi.12447
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geobiology ISSN: 1472-4669 Impact factor: 4.407