Brucite Microbialites in Living Coral Skeletons: Indicators of Extreme Microenvironments in Shallow-Marine Settings


Autoria(s): Buster, Noreen; Holmes, Charles; Kloprogge, Jacob; Nothdurft, Luke; Sorauf, James; Webb, Gregory
Data(s)

2005

Resumo

Brucite [Mg(OH)2] microbialites occur in vacated interseptal spaces of living scleractinian coral colonies (Acropora, Pocillopora, Porites) from subtidal and intertidal settings in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia, and subtidal Montastraea from the Florida Keys, United States. Brucite encrusts microbial filaments of endobionts (i.e., fungi, green algae, cyanobacteria) growing under organic biofilms; the brucite distribution is patchy both within interseptal spaces and within coralla. Although brucite is undersaturated in seawater, its precipitation was apparently induced in the corals by lowered pCO2 and increased pH within microenvironments protected by microbial biofilms. The occurrence of brucite in shallow-marine settings highlights the importance of microenvironments in the formation and early diagenesis of marine carbonates. Significantly, the brucite precipitates discovered in microenvironments in these corals show that early diagenetic products do not necessarily reflect ambient seawater chemistry. Errors in environmental interpretation may arise where unidentified precipitates occur in microenvironments in skeletal carbonates that are subsequently utilized as geochemical seawater proxies.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/23513/

Publicador

Geological Society of America

Relação

DOI:10.1130/G20932.1

Buster, Noreen, Holmes, Charles, Kloprogge, Jacob, Nothdurft, Luke, Sorauf, James, & Webb, Gregory (2005) Brucite Microbialites in Living Coral Skeletons: Indicators of Extreme Microenvironments in Shallow-Marine Settings. Geology (Boulder), 33(3), pp. 169-172.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #040000 EARTH SCIENCES #Brucite, Microbialite, Scleractinian Coral, Paleoclimate, Mg/Ca Ratio, Marine Chemistry
Tipo

Journal Article