Title of article :
Comparing petrographic signatures of bioalteration in recent to Mesoarchean pillow lavas: Tracing subsurface life in oceanic igneous rocks
Author/Authors :
Furnes، نويسنده , , Harald and Banerjee، نويسنده , , Neil R. and Staudigel، نويسنده , , Hubert and Muehlenbachs، نويسنده , , Karlis and McLoughlin، نويسنده , , Nicola and de Wit، نويسنده , , Maarten and Van Kranendonk، نويسنده , , Martin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
21
From page :
156
To page :
176
Abstract :
Bioalteration of basaltic glass in pillow lava rims and glassy volcanic breccias (hyaloclastites) produces several distinctive traces including conspicuous petrographic textures. These biologically generated textures include granular and tubular morphologies that form during glass dissolution by microbes and subsequent precipitation of amorphous material. Such bioalteration textures have been described from upper, in situ oceanic crust spanning the youngest to the oldest oceanic basins (0–170 Ma). The granular type consists of individual and/or coalescing spherical bodies with diameters typically around 0.4 μm. These are by far the most abundant, having been traced up to ∼550 m depths in the oceanic crust. The tubular type is defined by distinct, straight to irregular tubes with diameters most commonly around 1–2 μm and lengths exceeding 100 μm. The tubes are most abundant between ∼50 m and 250 m into the volcanic basement. We advance a model for the production of these bioalteration textures and propose criteria for testing the biogenicity and antiquity of ancient examples. r bioalteration textures have also been found in hyaloclastites and well-preserved pillow lava margins of Phanerozoic to Proterozoic ophiolites and Archean greenstone belts. The latter include pillow lavas and hyaloclastites from the Mesoarchean Barberton Greenstone Belt of South Africa and the East Pilbara Terrane of the Pilbara Craton, Western Australia, where conspicuous titanite-mineralized tubes, have been found. Petrographic relationships and age data confirm that these structures developed in the Archean. Thus, these biologically generated textures may provide an important tool for mapping the deep oceanic biosphere and for tracing some of the earliest biological processes on Earth and perhaps other planetary surfaces.
Keywords :
Bioalteration textures , oceanic crust , Ophiolites , Evidence for early life , Greenstone belts , Volcanic glass
Journal title :
Precambrian Research
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Precambrian Research
Record number :
2318832
Link To Document :
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