About This Item
- Full TextFull Text(subscription required)
- Pay-Per-View PurchasePay-Per-View
Purchase Options Explain
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)
Abstract
Research Articles
The Role of Microbial Activity In the Generation of Lower Cretaceous Mixed FE-Oxide–phosphate Ooids from the Provençal Domain, French Maritime Alps
Abstract
Early Hauterivian mixed Fe-oxide–phosphate ooids from the Lower Cretaceous condensed succession of the Alpine Provençal Domain are ellipsoidal, 200–2000 µm in diameter, and the main component of a sedimentary body, 0–100 cm thick, that can be traced laterally for tens of kilometers. Cathodoluminescence, EDS microprobe, backscattered electron imaging, epifluorescence,
XRD
, and micro Raman spectroscopy reveal that ooid cortices consist of variable proportions of Fe-oxide-rich and Ca-phosphate-rich layers.
SEM
observations show that phosphate-rich layers are composed of a dense matrix of micrometer-size, rod-shaped, commonly curved phosphate grains, whose size and shape strongly suggest a microbial origin. Conversely, Fe-oxide-rich ooid cortical layers consist of aggregates of micrometer-size, plate-like crystals of hematite that point to an inorganic precipitation. We suggest that the ooidal condensed interval records a long sedimentary history in an open shelf environment subject to a background accumulation of organic-rich, fine-grained sediments. It was periodically interrupted by high-energy, storm-related events that resulted in winnowing, reworking, and oxygenation that favored precipitation of Fe-oxides around nuclei of biogenic origin. Such precipitation was not uniform on the outer surface of ooids and influenced their ellipsoidal shape. After the return to background conditions, Fe-ooids were buried and driven from an oxic to a post-oxic subbottom geochemical environment where rod-shaped Fe-reducing bacteria colonized Fe-ooid outer surfaces. Decomposition of organic matter and release of P bound on Fe-oxides increased pore-water concentration of phosphate, which precipitated at the outer surfaces of the ooids, thus preserving the microbial community. The bimineralic composition of these ooids discloses a complex and prolonged history of cyclic alternations of oxic and post-oxic geochemical conditions, which are in turn related to alternating sediment accumulation and winnowing phases with exposure at the seafloor.
Pay-Per-View Purchase Options
The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.
| Watermarked PDF Document: $16 | |
| Open PDF Document: $28 |