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Izawa, Matthew R. M. Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University
Banerjee, Neil R. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Western Ontario
Shervais, John W. Department of Geology, Utah State University
Flemming, Roberta Department of Earth Sciences, University of Western Ontario
Hetherington, Callum J. Department of Geosciences, Texas Tech University
Muehlenbachs, Karlis Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta
Schultz, Cynthia Department of Geology, San Jose State University
Das, Debarati Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University
Hanan, Barry B. Department of Geological Sciences, San Diego State University
Abstract
Volcanic glasses are rarely preserved in the rock record, and the quality of preservation generally declines with increasing age. Records preserved in ancient basaltic glasses therefore provide important links between processes operating in the distant past, and those that are active on the Earth today. Microbial colonization has been linked to the formation of characteristic structures in basaltic glass, including tubules and granule-filled tubules, which are thought to be produced by microbially mediated glass dissolution. Structures of similar occurrence and morphology but filled almost entirely with fine-grained titanite have been documented in some ancient metabasalts. It has been suggested that the ancient titanite-mineralized structures are mineralized equivalents of hollow tubules in modern glassy basaltic rocks, but a direct link has not been firmly established. We report the discovery of tubular bioalteration structures in fresh and minimally altered basaltic glasses of middle Jurassic (164 Ma) age from the Stonyford Volcanic Complex (SFVC), Coast Range Ophiolite, California. Tubular structures hosted in unaltered basaltic glass are typically hollow, whilst those in zones of zeolitic alteration are mineralized by titanite. Tubules are continuous across zeolite-glass interfaces, which mark an abrupt change from titanite-filled to hollow tubules, demonstrating that titanite growth occurs preferentially within pre-existing tubular structures. Titanite mineralization in the SFVC represent a link between tubular structures in modern basaltic glass and titanite-mineralized features of similar morphology and spatial distribution in ancient metabasalts. Our observations support a link between textures in modern glassy basaltic rocks and some of the oldest-known putative ichnofossils.
Keywords
ichnofossil
bioalteration
astrobiology
basaltic glass
titanite
Published Date
2019-12-03
Publication Title
Frontiers in Earth Science
Volume
volume7
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Start Page
315
ISSN
2296-6463
Content Type
Journal Article
language
English
OAI-PMH Set
岡山大学
Copyright Holders
© 2019 Izawa, Banerjee, Shervais, Flemming, Hetherington, Muehlenbachs, Schultz, Das and Hanan.
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Related Url
isVersionOf https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2019.00315
License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/