Putative fossils of chemotrophic microbes preserved in seep carbonates from Vestnesa Ridge, off northwest Svalbard, Norway
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23140Dato
2021-10-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Himmler, Tobias; Cremiere, Antoine; Birgel, Daniel; Wirth, Richard; Orphan, Victoria J.; Kirsimae, Kalle; Knies, Jochen; Peckmann, Jörn; Lepland, AivoSammendrag
The microbial key players at methane seeps are methanotrophic archaea and sulfate-reducing bacteria. They form spherical aggregates and jointly mediate the sulfate-dependent anaerobic oxidation of methane (SD–AOM: CH4 + SO42– → HCO3– + HS– + H2O), thereby inducing the precipitation of authigenic seep carbonates. While seep carbonates constitute valuable archives for molecular fossils of SD–AOM-mediating microbes, no microfossils have been identified as AOM aggregates to date. We report clustered spherical microstructures engulfed in 13C-depleted aragonite cement (δ13C values as low as –33‰) of Pleistocene seep carbonates. The clusters comprise Mg-calcite spheres between ~5 μm (single spheres) and ~30 μm (clusters) in diameter. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy revealed a porous nanocrystalline fabric in the core area of the spheres surrounded by one or two concentric layers of Mg-calcite crystals. In situ measured sphere δ13C values as low as –42‰ indicate that methane-derived carbon is the dominant carbon source. The size and concentric layering of the spheres resembles mineralized aggregates of natural anaerobic methanotrophic archaea (ANME) of the ANME-2 group surrounded by one or two layers of sulfate-reducing bacteria. Abundant carbonate-bound 13C-depleted lipid biomarkers of archaea and bacteria indicative of the ANME-2-Desulfosarcina/Desulfococcus consortium agree with SD–AOM-mediating microbes as critical agents of carbonate precipitation. Given the morphological resemblance, in concert with negative in situ δ13C values and abundant SD–AOM-diagnostic biomarkers, the clustered spheres likely represent fossils of SD–AOM-mediating microbes.
Forlag
Geological Society of AmericaSitering
Himmler T, Cremiere A, Birgel D, Wirth R, Orphan VJ, Kirsimae K, Knies J, Peckmann J, Lepland A. Putative fossils of chemotrophic microbes preserved in seep carbonates from Vestnesa Ridge, off northwest Svalbard, Norway. Geology. 2021Metadata
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© 2021 Geological Society of America