4.7 Article

Aerobic biomineralization of Mg-rich carbonates: Implications for natural environments

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 281, Issue 3-4, Pages 143-150

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2010.11.020

Keywords

Mg-rich carbonates; Dolomite; Huntite; Halophilic aerobic bacteria; Stable carbon isotope

Funding

  1. Swiss Science National Foundation (SNF) [20-067620, 20-105149]
  2. NASA's Astrobiology Institute
  3. European Science Foundation (ESF) [2650]
  4. MICINN (Spain) [AYA-2009-11681]
  5. ERC [2503050-IPBSL]
  6. MEC (Spain) [CGL-2009-09249, CGL-2007-66744-CO2-01]

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We studied the formation of Mg-rich carbonate in culture experiments using different aerobic bacterial strains and aqueous Mg/Ca ratios (2 to 11.5) at Earth surface conditions. These bacteria promoted the formation of microenvironments that facilitate the precipitation of mineral phases (dolomite, huntite, high Mg-calcite and hydromagnesite) that were undersaturated in the bulk solution or kinetically inhibited. Dolomite, huntite, high Mg-calcite, hydromagnesite and struvite precipitated in different proportions and at different times, depending on the composition of the medium. The Mg content of dolomite and calcite decreased with an increasing Ca concentration in the medium. The stable carbon isotope composition of the Mg-rich carbonate precipitates reflected the isotope composition of the organic compounds present in the media, suggesting that microbial metabolism strongly influenced the carbon isotope composition of biomediated carbonates. We observed that Ca-enriched carbonate precipitates have relatively low carbon isotope composition. These results provide insights into the mechanism(s) of carbonate formation in natural systems, and they are of fundamental importance for understanding modern environments in which carbonate minerals form as a window into the geologic past. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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