Carbon cycling at ancient methane-seeps

2004 | review. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Carbon cycling at ancient methane-seeps​
Peckmann, J.& Thiel, V. ​ (2004)
Chemical Geology, 205​(3-4) pp. 443​-467​.​
Elsevier Science Bv. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2003.12.025 

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Authors
Peckmann, Joern; Thiel, V. 
Abstract
The oldest known seep deposits with macroinvertebrate taxa are Devonian in age. Although more and more examples continue to be discovered, the Palaeozoic and Mesozoic record of methane-seeps is still fragmentary. The relationship of ancient carbonate deposits to methane seepage is established by (i) the geological setting and structural features, (ii) the occurrence of low diversity but high abundance faunal assemblages, (iii) carbonate fabrics, (iv) low delta(13)C values of early diagenetic carbonate phases, and (v) characteristic (13)C-depleted biomarkers. In this review, special emphasis is placed on biogeochemical processes at ancient methane-seeps. Specific carbonate fabrics and phases include, in order of decreasing significance for seep-dominated environments, (i) inverted stromatactoid cavities, (ii) upside-down stromatolites, (iii) globular fabrics, (iv) botryoidal aragonite, (v) micritic nodules, (vi) fractures, (vii) clotted micrites, and (viii) constructive seams representing fossilised biofilms. The carbon of the early diagenetic carbonate phases was derived predominantly from the oxidation of methane which resulted in low delta(13)C values. Pyrites enclosed in the seep limestones generally show low delta(34)S values and a significant variability of their isotopic composition on a small scale, both indicating bacterial sulphate reduction as the sulphide-supplying process. (13)C-depleted lipid biomarkers characterise the microbial populations involved in the cycling of carbon at ancient methane-seeps. Typical compounds include isoprene-based lipids from archaea, and linear and monomethyl-branched carbon skeletons assigned to sulphate-reducing bacteria (SRB), consistent with the syntrophic relationship of these microbes in the anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM). (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V All rights reserved.
Issue Date
2004
Status
published
Publisher
Elsevier Science Bv
Journal
Chemical Geology 
ISSN
0009-2541

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