4.7 Article

Eve of biomineralization: Controls on skeletal mineralogy

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 12, Pages 923-926

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G25094A.1

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Funding

  1. Departamento de Ciencia, Tecnologia y Universidad, Gobierno de Aragon, Spain [M1042/2006]

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Carbonate mineralogies have oscillated between aragonite and calcite sells through geological time, proposed to be due mainly to secular variation in the magnesium/calcium ratio driven by changing rates of ocean crust production. A quantitative compilation of inorganic and biominerals from the onset of biomineralization (late Ediacaran-Middle Ordovician) reveals a correspondence between seawater chemistry and the first adopted mineralogy of skeletal clades. Ediacaran-Tommotian skeletons and inorganic precipitates were composed exclusively of aragonite or high-Mg calcite, but these were replaced by low-Mg calcite mineralogies during the early Atdabanian, implying the onset of a calcite sea. This transition is empirically constrained by fluid inclusion data. Late Atbadanian-Botoman inorganic precipitates returned to aragonite, with high-Mg calcite echinoderms and solitary tabulaconids and massive aragonitic tabulaconids originating during this interval. Middle Cambrian-Ordovician inorganic precipitates were low-Mg calcite, and the Ordovician radiation in skeletal expression was due mostly to groups with low-Mg calcite mineralogies. These short-lived transitions can he most parsimoniously explained by minor oscillations of mMg:Ca around similar to 2 during thids period, possibly combined with the progressive onset of greenhouse conditions during the mid-Late Cambrian.

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