Walter M R, Desmarais D, Farmer J D, Hinman N W
School of Earth Sciences, Macquarie University, Australia.
Palaios. 1996;11:497-518.
The Devonian to Carboniferous sinters of the Drummond Basin, Australia, are among the oldest well established examples of fossil subaerial hot springs. Numerous subaerial and subaqueous spring deposits are known from the geological record as a result of the occurrence of economic mineral deposits in many of them. Some are reported to contain fossils, but very few have been studied by paleobiologists; they represent an untapped source of paleobiological information on the history of hydrothermal ecosystems. Such systems are of special interest, given the molecular biological evidence that thermophilic bacteria lie near the root of the tree of extant life. The Drummond Basin sinters are very closely comparable with modern examples in Yellowstone National Park and elsewhere. Thirteen microfacies are recognisable in the field, ranging from high temperature apparently abiotic geyserite through various forms of stromatolitic sinter probably of cyanobacterial origin to ambient temperature marsh deposits. Microfossils in the stromatolites are interpreted as cyanobacterial sheaths. Herbaceous lycopsids occur in the lower temperature deposits.
澳大利亚德拉蒙德盆地泥盆纪至石炭纪的泉华是已知最古老的、有充分证据的化石陆地温泉实例。地质记录中已知有大量陆地和水下温泉沉积物,因为其中许多含有经济矿床。据报道,有些含有化石,但古生物学家对其研究的很少;它们代表了热液生态系统历史上古生物信息的未开发来源。鉴于分子生物学证据表明嗜热细菌位于现存生命之树的根部,这样的系统特别令人感兴趣。德拉蒙德盆地的泉华与黄石国家公园及其他地方的现代实例非常相似。在野外可识别出13种微相,从高温下明显非生物成因的硅华,到各种可能起源于蓝细菌的叠层石泉华,再到常温的沼泽沉积物。叠层石中的微化石被解释为蓝细菌鞘。草本石松类植物出现在较低温度的沉积物中。