Messinian bottom-grown selenitic gypsum: An archive of microbial life

Marcello Natalicchio, Daniel Birgel, Francesco Dela Pierre, Simone Ziegenbalg, Lars Hoffmann-Sell, Susanne Gier, Joern Peckmann

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Primary gypsum deposits, which accumulated in the Mediterranean Basin during the so-called Messinian salinity crisis (5.97-5.33 Ma), represent an excellent archive of microbial life. We investigated the molecular fossil inventory and the corresponding compound-specific delta C-13 values of bottom-grown gypsum formed during the first stage of the crisis in four marginal basins across the Mediterranean (Nijar, Spain; Vena del Gesso, Italy; Heraklion, Crete; and Psematismenos, Cyprus). All studied gypsum samples contain intricate networks of filamentous microfossils, whose phylogenetic affiliation has been debated for a long time. Petrographic analysis, molecular fossil inventories (hydrocarbons, alcohols, and carboxylic acids), and carbon stable isotope patterns suggest that the mazes of filamentous fossils represent benthic microbial assemblages dominated by chemotrophic sulfide-oxidizing bacteria; in some of the samples, the body fossils are accompanied by lipids produced by sulfate-reducing bacteria. Abundant isoprenoid alcohols including diphytanyl glycerol diethers (DGDs) and glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs), typified by highly variable carbon stable isotope composition with delta C-13 values spanning from -40 to -14 parts per thousand, reveal the presence of planktic and benthic archaeal communities dwelling in Messinian paleoenvironments. The compound inventory of archaeal lipids indicates the existence of a stratified water column, with a normal marine to diluted upper water column and more saline deeper waters. This study documents the lipid biomarker inventory of microbial life preserved in ancient gypsum deposits, helping to reconstruct the widely debated conditions under which Messinian gypsum formed.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3-21
Number of pages19
JournalGeobiology
Volume20
Issue number1
Early online date23 Jul 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 105121 Sedimentology

Keywords

  • archaea
  • Messinian
  • stratification
  • sulfate-reducing bacteria
  • sulfide-oxidizing bacteria
  • SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIA
  • CARBON-ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION
  • GLYCEROL TETRAETHER LIPIDS
  • BASIN SE SPAIN
  • ANAEROBIC OXIDATION
  • SALINITY CRISIS
  • NIJAR BASIN
  • FATTY-ACIDS
  • LATE MIOCENE
  • ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNIFICANCE
  • LIPID BIOMARKER PATTERNS

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