Show simple item record

AuthorBrauchli, Marisa
AuthorMcKenzie, Judith
AuthorStrohmenger, Christian
AuthorSadooni, Fadhil
AuthorVasconcelos, Crisógono
Available date2018-04-03T08:27:53Z
Publication Date2015-09-24
Publication NameCarbonates and Evaporites
CitationBrauchli, M., McKenzie, J.A., Strohmenger, C.J. et al. Carbonates Evaporites (2016) 31: 339. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13146-015-0275-0
ISSN0891-2556
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/6506
AbstractThe Dohat Faishakh sabkha in Qatar is one of the rare modern environments where it is possible to study the formation of dolomite, a mineral whose origin has been long debated. In previous studies, dolomite formation in this area was considered to be the result of a penecontemporaneous replacement of aragonite, occurring in the presence of Mg-rich evaporated pore-waters. However, a re-investigation of the sabkha revealed that dolomite is not forming exclusively under the evaporitic conditions that characterize the supratidal zone, but also in microbial mats that colonize the lower intertidal zone, indicating that evaporated pore-waters are not a strict requirement for the mineralization process. Moreover, in the supratidal zone, portions of the sediment that are rich in dolomite are also relatively richer in organic material, which derives from partially degraded microbial mats buried in the sediments. Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) that constitute microbial mats are recognized as an important component for the formation of Mg-rich carbonates. The presence of living and decaying microbial mats comprising EPS, rather than a replacement process, may be the key factor for dolomite formation in the Dohat Faishakh sabkha.
SponsorSwiss National Science Foundation
Languageen
PublisherSpringer Verlag
SubjectDolomite
Microbial mat
Exopolymeric substances
Biomineral
Evaporites
Sabkha
TitleThe importance of microbial mats for dolomite formation in the Dohat Faishakh sabkha, Qatar
TypeArticle
Pagination339–345
Issue Number3
Volume Number31
ESSN1878-5212


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record