Worm tube fossils from the Hollard Mound hydrocarbon-seep deposit, Middle Devonian, Morocco: Palaeozoic seep-related vestimentiferans?

2005 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Worm tube fossils from the Hollard Mound hydrocarbon-seep deposit, Middle Devonian, Morocco: Palaeozoic seep-related vestimentiferans?​
Peckmann, J. ; Little, C. T. S.; Gill, F. & Reitner, J. ​ (2005) 
Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology227(1-3) pp. 242​-257​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2005.04.021 

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Authors
Peckmann, Jörn ; Little, Crispin T. S.; Gill, F.; Reitner, Joachim 
Abstract
The core facies of the Hollard Mound (southeastern Morocco) contains a dense cluster of worm tubes and a high-abundance but low-diversity assemblage of bivalve molluscs. The tube worms and bivalves lived at an Eifelian hydrocarbon-seep. They are enclosed in microbial carbonates, which are similar to those that form modem seep limestones. These carbonates show delta(13)C values as low as -21 parts per thousand. Likely carbon sources include thermogenic methane or petroleum. Hydrothermalism was possibly a factor in the generation of hydrocarbons in the Early Devonian sedimentary succession of the Hamar Laghdad with its submarine volcanics, but it is considered unlikely that the Eifelian seep fluids were hydrothermal. The Hollard Mound worm tube fossils share some characteristics with living seep vestimentiferan worms, but differ in having calcitic tube walls. Deformed Hollard Mound tubes indicate that the primary tube wall material may originally have been flexible. Comparative analyses of tubes of modem vestimentiferan worms from Gulf of Mexico and Congo Fan seeps reveal that early taphonomic processes lead to the calcification of primary organic and flexible tube walls. A very specific fabric found in both modem taphonomically altered vestimentiferan tubes and the Hollard Mound tubes is created by the delamination of individual layers of the tube wall induced by cement growth. A particular carbonate phase of the Hollard Mound microbialites is the so-called,carbonate with spheres'. The thin rims of the sub-mm-sized spheres are made of apatite, which is thought to have precipitated by the action of microbes that were degrading fluid droplets (e.g., petroleum at the Eifelian seep site). (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Issue Date
2005
Journal
Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 
ISSN
0031-0182

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