Abstract
Two Greek Pleistocene tufa stromatolites were examined petrographically and with stable isotope geochemistry to determine whether calcite spar is of primary or diagenetic origin. The younger (ca 100 ka) tufa from Zemeno primarily is micritic, with primary columnar calcite spar restricted to areas immediately above chironomid larval tubes. This relationship suggests that chironomid larval feeding behaviour is responsible for the development of Zemeno tufa columnar calcite, probably involving biological substances smeared onto the tufa surface. Most micritic crystals are not suitably oriented to allow later post-depositional growth resulting in columnar fabrics. The older (ca 1 Ma) predominantly sparry tufa from Nemea contains some chironomid tubes and organic cyanobacterial filaments preserved in crystal fans but also contains many fabrics found in primary speleothem spar. Columnar spar here is unlikely to be the result of post-depositional crystal growth. A comparison of stable isotopic trends between the two tufa deposits suggests that both contain interpretable seasonal trends and implies little or minor post-depositional alteration of either tufa. Consequently, there is no basis for the common assumption that sparry tufa fabrics must be of diagenetic origin.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1283-1302 |
| Number of pages | 20 |
| Journal | Sedimentology |
| Volume | 58 |
| Issue number | 5 |
| Early online date | 5 Feb 2011 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Aug 2011 |
Funding
We would like to thank IGME and the villagers of Zemeno for allowing us to work in Greece and for access to the tufa site. Mike Leeder (UEA) and Martin Brasier (Oxford) provided field assistance and helpful discussions at outcrops. Alina D. Marca-Bell and Paul F. Dennis assisted with stable isotope measurements at UEA. Allan Pentecost (King's College, London) helped with the identification of cyanobacteria. The journal reviewers and editors provided comments that helped improve the work. ATB was funded by NERC studentship NER/S/A/2003/11221.
Keywords
- aggrading neomorphism
- calcite spar
- diagenesis
- Greece
- laminated tufa
- stromatolite
- microbial carbonates
- stable-isotopes
- trace-element
- water tufa
- travertine
- records
- deposits
- calcification
- precipitation