4.0 Article

Diagenetic transformations (opal-A to quartz) of low- and mid-temperature microbial textures in siliceous hot-spring deposits, Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 40, Issue 11, Pages 1679-1696

Publisher

NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL CANADA
DOI: 10.1139/E03-064

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Silica sinter is a subaerial hot-spring deposit formed upon cooling (<100degreesC) of discharging alkali-chloride waters. Silica deposition traps and fossilizes living microbes in low-temperature (<35degreesC) to mid-temperature (similar to35-59degreesC) apron-terrace outflow channels and pools, which record distinctive macrotextures and microtextures along a thermal gradient. Sinters from four geothermal fields, Orakei Korako, northern Waiotapu, Te Kopia, and Umukuri, within the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand, were sampled from two common microbe-rich microfacies (low-temperature palisade, mid-temperature bubble mat) through a range of ages (modern to similar to40 000 years BP). We observed morphologic changes in microbial silicification and stepwise transitions in silica phase mineralogy throughout diagenesis (opal-A to quartz). X-ray powder diffractometry analysis of Taupo Volcanic Zone sinter samples revealed that mode of microbial fossilization is controlled by silica phase mineralogy, which also determines the preservation potential of environmentally significant and measurable filament parameters. Typical low-temperature palisade microfacies display thick sheaths (>3 mum diameter) and coarse tubular filament moulds >5 mum in diameter, whereas mid-temperature bubble mat microfacies characteristically consist of thin sheaths (similar to1 mum diameter) with fine moulds < 3 mum in diameter. Upon diagenesis and silica phase transformation to opal-CT, the two subenvironments cannot be distinguished based on filament diameter alone. This study of recurring microfacies in sinters of different ages allowed us to systematically track the transformation of mineralogical and morphological changes in biotic-abiotic depositional elements during diagenesis of silica sinter, and therefore enhance the paleoenvironmental, paleobiological, and paleohydrologic utility of hydrothermal deposits in the geologic record.

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