4.4 Article

Phosphatic scales in vase-shaped microfossil assemblages from Death Valley, Grand Canyon, Tasmania, and Svalbard

期刊

GEOBIOLOGY
卷 19, 期 4, 页码 364-375

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gbi.12439

关键词

apatitic scale microfossils; biomineralization; Neoproterozoic; phosphorus; Tonian; vase-shaped microfossil

资金

  1. Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research
  2. NASA Astrobiology
  3. Palaeontological Association
  4. University of Cincinnati, Department of Geology
  5. National Science Foundation [EAR--0922305]

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The prevalence of biomineralization around 550-520 million years ago is a significant development, with evidence of similar occurrences in different animal lineages and protists. The discovery of apatite-kerogen scale-shaped microfossils from the Tonian era suggests the presence of skeletal elements in ancient protistan cells, possibly related to the availability of phosphorus during that time.
Although biomineralized skeletal elements dominate the Phanerozoic fossil record, they did not become common until similar to 550-520 Ma when independent acquisitions of biomineralization appeared in multiple lineages of animals and a few protists (single-celled eukaryotes). Evidence of biomineralization preceding the late Ediacaran is spotty aside from the apatitic scale microfossils of the similar to 811 Ma Fifteenmile Group, northwestern Canada. Here, we describe scale-shaped microfossils from four vase-shaped microfossil (VSM)-bearing units of later Tonian age: the Togari Group of Tasmania, Chuar and Pahrump groups of southwestern United States, and the Roaldtoppen Group of Svalbard. These scale-shaped microfossils consist of thin, similar to 13 micron-long plates typically surrounded by a 1-3 micron-thick colorless envelope; they are found singly and in heterotypic and monotypic clusters of a few to >20 specimens. Raman spectroscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy indicate these microfossils are composed of apatite and kerogen, just as is seen in the Fifteenmile Group scale microfossils. Despite compositional similarity, however, these scales are probably not homologous, representing instead, an independent acquisition of apatite mineralization. We propose that these apatite-kerogen scale-shaped microfossils are skeletal elements of a protistan cell. In particular, their consistent co-occurrence with VSMs, and similarities with scales of arcellinid testate amoebae, a group to which the VSMs are thought to belong, suggest the possibility that these microfossils may be test-forming scales of ancient arcellinid testate amoebae. The apparent apatite biomineralization in both these microfossils and the Fifteenmile scales is unexpected given its exceedingly rare use in skeletons of modern protists. This modern absence is attributed to the extravagance of using a limiting nutrient in a structural element, but multiple occurrences of apatite biomineralization in the Tonian suggest that phosphorus was not a limiting nutrient for these organisms, a suggestion consistent with the idea that dissolved seawater phosphate concentrations may have been higher at this time.

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