Centre for Microscopy Characterisation and Analysis, The University of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia.
School of Earth Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia.
Geobiology. 2018 Mar;16(2):203-215. doi: 10.1111/gbi.12272. Epub 2018 Jan 10.
Stromatolites are cited as some of the earliest evidence for life on Earth, but problems remain in reconciling the paucity of microfossils in ancient carbonate examples with the abundance of microbes that help construct modern analogues. Here, we trace the mineralisation pathway of filamentous cyanobacteria within stromatolites from Lake Thetis, Western Australia, providing new insights into microfossil preservation in carbonate stromatolites. Lake Thetis cyanobacteria exhibit a spectrum of mineralisation processes that include early precipitation of Mg-silicates, largely controlled by the morphochemical features of the cyanobacteria, followed by aragonite formation that is inferred to be driven by heterotrophic activity. Fossilised cyanobacteria with high-quality morphological preservation are characterised by a significant volume of authigenic Mg-silicates, which have preferentially nucleated in/on extracellular organic material and on cell walls, and now replicate the region once occupied by the cyanobacterial sheath. In such specimens, aragonite is restricted to the outer sheath margin and parts of the cell interior. Cyanobacteria that display more significant degradation appear to possess a higher ratio of aragonite to Mg-silicate. In these specimens, aragonite forms micronodules in the sheath zone and is spatially associated with the inferred remains of heterotrophic bacteria. Aragonite also occurs as an advancing front from the outer margin of the sheath where it is commonly intergrown with Mg-silicates. Where there is no evidence of Mg-silicates within filaments, the fidelity of microfossil preservation is poor. In these cases, individual filaments may no longer be visible under light microscopy, and little organic material remains, but filament traces remain detectable using electron microscopy due to variations in aragonite texture. These data provide further evidence that authigenic silicate minerals play a crucial role in the fossilisation of micro-organisms; in their absence, carbonate crystal growth potentially mediated by heterotrophic microbial decay may largely obliterate morphological evidence for life within stromatolites, although mineralogical traces may still be detectable using electron microscopy.
叠层石被认为是地球上最早的生命证据之一,但在将古代碳酸盐标本中微生物化石的稀少与帮助构建现代类似物的微生物的丰富性相协调方面仍然存在问题。在这里,我们追踪了来自西澳大利亚泰蒂斯湖的叠层石中丝状蓝藻的矿化途径,为碳酸盐叠层石中微生物化石的保存提供了新的见解。泰蒂斯湖蓝藻表现出一系列矿化过程,包括早期镁硅酸盐的沉淀,这主要受蓝藻的形态化学特征控制,随后是方解石的形成,这被推断为异养活性驱动的。具有高质量形态保存的化石蓝藻的特征是大量的自生镁硅酸盐,这些镁硅酸盐优先在细胞外有机物质和细胞壁上成核,并复制蓝藻鞘曾经占据的区域。在这些标本中,方解石仅限于外鞘边缘和细胞内部的某些部分。显示出更显著降解的蓝藻似乎具有更高的方解石与镁硅酸盐的比值。在这些标本中,方解石在鞘区形成微结核,并与推断的异养细菌残留物空间相关。方解石也作为鞘边缘的前缘从外边缘形成,在那里它通常与镁硅酸盐共生。在纤维中没有镁硅酸盐的证据的地方,微生物化石的保存保真度很差。在这些情况下,单个纤维可能在光镜下不再可见,几乎没有有机物质残留,但由于方解石纹理的变化,使用电子显微镜仍然可以检测到纤维痕迹。这些数据进一步证明自生硅酸盐矿物在微生物化石化中起着至关重要的作用;在它们不存在的情况下,异养微生物分解可能介导的碳酸盐晶体生长可能会极大地抹去叠层石中生命的形态学证据,尽管使用电子显微镜仍可能检测到矿物学痕迹。