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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019
    Description: 〈span〉Elevated mercury concentrations in ancient sedimentary rocks are used as a fingerprint for large igneous province (LIP) volcanism because there is a tight association between known LIPs and coeval sedimentary Hg anomalies. While nonvolcanic processes of sedimentary Hg enrichment, including redox variations, have been demonstrated in modern settings, interpretations of ancient sedimentary Hg records have focused on LIP volcanism. Here, we document a link between sedimentary Hg enrichment and marine redox changes during the late Cambrian Steptoean positive isotopic carbon excursion (SPICE) event, a time with no known LIP. We report a new occurrence of the SPICE event from the Eilean Dubh Formation of northern Scotland, which preserves a series of coeval Hg enrichments. Abundant glauconite, a redox-sensitive iron-bearing mineral, co-occurs stratigraphically with the SPICE and Hg enrichments but is rare to absent from the rest of the section, and bioturbation is low in strata spanning the SPICE. We suggest that local Hg enrichments were driven by changing marine redox conditions during the SPICE event, rather than emplacement of a LIP. Redox oscillations should be considered as an additional control on Hg enrichments in the geologic record.〈/span〉
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2016-06-30
    Description: Ediacaran sedimentary successions are noted for the preservation of microbes and microbial textures on the surfaces of sandstones and siltstones. Although microorganisms have been preserved in coarse-grained siliciclastic sand throughout geologic history, the exceptional preservation of microbes in Ediacaran sediments suggests the potential for a unique taphonomic window. Here, we identify conditions conducive to the fossilization of filamentous cyanobacteria growing in the presence of siliciclastic sand and demonstrate that the sheaths of filamentous cyanobacteria can become coated by clay minerals within days under oxic conditions. Smooth, extensive mineral coatings develop in the presence of 5.6 to 55.6 mg/L of suspended clay and 0.1 mM or greater concentrations of dissolved silica. Thus, elevated concentrations of seawater silica and the delivery of suspended clays promote microbial preservation on sandy and silty surfaces. These factors likely facilitated microbial fossilization in coarse-grained siliciclastic sand throughout the Ediacaran Period and may have also contributed to microbial fossilization in siliciclastic deposits at other times throughout Earth’s history.
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-07-01
    Description: Sandcracks, which are ubiquitous in Holocene eolian and beach backshore carbonate grainstone on Alligator Point, Cat Island, Bahamas, resemble polygonal mudcracks, but formed in ooid sand without muddy matrix. In experiments on Cat Island beach sand, sediment surfaces cracked polygonally in the absence of mud or biofilms while drying at room temperature due to contraction generated by capillary effects related to surface tension attraction of interstitial water. Gravitational collapse of irregular open pores and repacking of sand grains due to loss of cohesion between particles caused by evaporation of water enhance the cracking process and appearance of polygons by providing space for cracks to expand. The polygons are held together by any remaining capillary moisture and associated meniscus cement, which precipitates as the sand dries. Polygonal sandcracks can be preserved by rapid lithification of carbonate sand, but have been documented only rarely from other localities because their formation requires well-sorted, well-rounded spherical grains rather than those making up the more common, heterogeneous skeletal and peloidal sediment in carbonate settings. Interpretation of this primary sedimentary desiccation structure provides new insights into sedimentation and diagenesis of ooid-rich deposits and can aid in recognizing ancient subaerial exposure horizons.
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019
    Description: 〈span〉〈div〉Abstract〈/div〉Elevated mercury concentrations in ancient sedimentary rocks are used as a fingerprint for large igneous province (LIP) volcanism because there is a tight association between known LIPs and coeval sedimentary Hg anomalies. While nonvolcanic processes of sedimentary Hg enrichment, including redox variations, have been demonstrated in modern settings, interpretations of ancient sedimentary Hg records have focused on LIP volcanism. Here, we document a link between sedimentary Hg enrichment and marine redox changes during the late Cambrian Steptoean positive isotopic carbon excursion (SPICE) event, a time with no known LIP. We report a new occurrence of the SPICE event from the Eilean Dubh Formation of northern Scotland, which preserves a series of coeval Hg enrichments. Abundant glauconite, a redox-sensitive iron-bearing mineral, co-occurs stratigraphically with the SPICE and Hg enrichments but is rare to absent from the rest of the section, and bioturbation is low in strata spanning the SPICE. We suggest that local Hg enrichments were driven by changing marine redox conditions during the SPICE event, rather than emplacement of a LIP. Redox oscillations should be considered as an additional control on Hg enrichments in the geologic record.〈/span〉
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2012-01-01
    Description: Foraminifera are an ecologically important group of modern heterotrophic amoeboid eukaryotes whose naked and testate ancestors are thought to have evolved ~1 Ga ago. However, the single-chambered agglutinated tests of these protists appear in the fossil record only after ca. 580 Ma, coinciding with the appearance of macroscopic and mineralized animals. Here we report the discovery of small, slender tubular microfossils in the Sturtian (ca. 716–635 Ma) cap carbonate of the Rasthof Formation in Namibia. The tubes are 200–1300 µm long and 20–70 µm wide, and preserve apertures and variably wide lumens, folds, constrictions, and ridges. Their sometimes flexible walls are composed of carbonaceous material and detrital minerals. This combination of morphologic and compositional characters is also present in some species of modern single-chambered agglutinated tubular foraminiferans, and is not found in other agglutinated eukaryotes. The preservation of possible early Foraminifera in the carbonate rocks deposited in the immediate aftermath of Sturtian low-latitude glaciation indicates that various morphologically modern protists thrived in microbially dominated ecosystems, and contributed to the cycling of carbon in Neoproterozoic oceans much before the rise of complex animals.
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2013-06-29
    Description: Neoproterozoic strata in Death Valley, California, contain eukaryotic microfossils and glacial deposits that have been used to assess the severity of putative snowball Earth events and the biological response to extreme environmental change. These successions also contain evidence for synsedimentary faulting that has been related to the rifting of Rodinia, and in turn the tectonic context of the onset of snowball Earth. These interpretations hinge on local geological relationships and both regional and global stratigraphic correlations. Here, we present new geological mapping, measured stratigraphic sections, carbon and strontium isotope chemostratigraphy, and micropaleontology from the Neoproterozoic glacial deposits and bounding strata in Death Valley. These new data enable us to refine regional correlations, both across Death Valley and throughout Laurentia, and construct a new age model for glacigenic strata and microfossil assemblages. Particularly, our remapping of the Kingston Peak Formation in the Saddle Peak Hills and near the type locality shows for the first time that glacial deposits of both the Marinoan and Sturtian glaciations can be distinguished in southeastern Death Valley, and that beds containing vase-shaped microfossils are slump blocks derived from the underlying strata. These slump blocks are associated with multiple overlapping unconformities that developed during synsedimentary faulting, which is a common feature of Cyrogenian strata along the margin of Laurentia from California to Alaska. With these data, we conclude that all of the microfossils that have been described to date in Neoproterozoic strata of Death Valley predate the glaciations and do not bear on the severity, extent, or duration of Neoproterozoic snowball Earth events.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7606
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2674
    Topics: Geosciences
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