TY - JOUR
T1 - Diverse microstructures from Archaean chert from the Mount Goldsworthy-Mount Grant area, Pilbara Craton, Western Australia
T2 - Microfossils, dubiofossils, or pseudofossils?
AU - Sugitani, Kenichiro
AU - Grey, Kathleen
AU - Allwood, Abigail
AU - Nagaoka, Tsutomu
AU - Mimura, Koichi
AU - Minami, Masayo
AU - Marshall, Craig P.
AU - Van Kranendonk, Martin J.
AU - Walter, Malcolm R.
N1 - Funding Information:
We especially wish to express our gratitude to Dr. R. Sugisaki, Dr. M. Adachi, Dr. M. Hoshino, Dr. T. Matsubara, Dr. T. Nishikawa, Nagoya University for their useful comments and encouragement, and to Dr. K. Yamamoto, Nagoya University and Dr. H. Maekawa, Osaka Prefecture University for XRF and SEM-EDX analyses, respectively. KS gratefully acknowledges Mr. T. Asano for his help in sampling at Mounts Goldsworthy and Grant in 2001 and to Dr. K.J. McNamara, Western Australia Museum and the Australian Customs Service, for their assistance in exporting samples to Japan. Dr. A. Hickman (GSWA) assisted in updating the geochronological constraints. Dr. M. Brasier and an anonymous reviewer made constructive criticisms on an early version that allowed us to focus and improve the manuscript considerably. Dr. J.W. Schopf, Dr. V.N. Sergeev and an anonymous reviewer provided for helpful and constructive comments on the revised manuscript. This paper is a product of a Joint Research Program (Japan-Australia) supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. KG and MVK publish with the permission of the Director of the Geological Survey of Western Australia. MRW, CPM and AA acknowledge funding from Macquarie University and the Australian Research Council.
PY - 2007/10/5
Y1 - 2007/10/5
N2 - A diverse assemblage of indigenous carbonaceous microstructures, classified here as highly probable microfossils to pseudomicrofossils, is present in the >ca. 2.97 Ga Farrel Quartzite (Gorge Creek Group) at Mount Grant and Mount Goldsworthy, Pilbara Craton, Western Australia. The microstructures are an integral part of the primary sedimentary fabrics preserved in black chert beds. The interbedding of chert with layers of large silicified crystal pseudomorphs and fine to coarse grained volcaniclastic/clastic beds indicate deposition in a partially evaporitic basin with terrigenous clastic and volcaniclastic input. Similar associations of microstructures are present at the same stratigraphic level in outcrops more than 2 km apart. Four major microstructural types are present: thread-like, film-like, spheroidal and lenticular to spindle-like, each of which can be further subdivided into several sub-types. Most of the microstructures were deposited as part of an assemblage of chemical and clastic sediments, although there are some thread-like microstructures present for which a synsedimentary origin cannot be confirmed. Many specimens appear to have originally had flexible but breakable walls and some occur in colony-like aggregations. Size distributions for the four major types are generally narrow, a feature typical of biogenic structures. The microstructures are composed of disordered carbon (as revealed by Raman spectroscopy) and the bulk isotopic composition of the carbon is δ13C < -30 per mil, which is consistent with biological processing. The combined morphological and geological evidence suggests that the film-like structures, small spheres associated with films, large spheroids and spindle-like structures are probable to highly probable fossil remains of microorganisms. The morphological variety among the microstructures suggests that a diverse microbial ecosystem flourished in the Pilbara region during the Archaean.
AB - A diverse assemblage of indigenous carbonaceous microstructures, classified here as highly probable microfossils to pseudomicrofossils, is present in the >ca. 2.97 Ga Farrel Quartzite (Gorge Creek Group) at Mount Grant and Mount Goldsworthy, Pilbara Craton, Western Australia. The microstructures are an integral part of the primary sedimentary fabrics preserved in black chert beds. The interbedding of chert with layers of large silicified crystal pseudomorphs and fine to coarse grained volcaniclastic/clastic beds indicate deposition in a partially evaporitic basin with terrigenous clastic and volcaniclastic input. Similar associations of microstructures are present at the same stratigraphic level in outcrops more than 2 km apart. Four major microstructural types are present: thread-like, film-like, spheroidal and lenticular to spindle-like, each of which can be further subdivided into several sub-types. Most of the microstructures were deposited as part of an assemblage of chemical and clastic sediments, although there are some thread-like microstructures present for which a synsedimentary origin cannot be confirmed. Many specimens appear to have originally had flexible but breakable walls and some occur in colony-like aggregations. Size distributions for the four major types are generally narrow, a feature typical of biogenic structures. The microstructures are composed of disordered carbon (as revealed by Raman spectroscopy) and the bulk isotopic composition of the carbon is δ13C < -30 per mil, which is consistent with biological processing. The combined morphological and geological evidence suggests that the film-like structures, small spheres associated with films, large spheroids and spindle-like structures are probable to highly probable fossil remains of microorganisms. The morphological variety among the microstructures suggests that a diverse microbial ecosystem flourished in the Pilbara region during the Archaean.
KW - Archaean
KW - Chert
KW - Evaporite
KW - Farrel Quartzite
KW - Microfossil
KW - Pilbara
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U2 - 10.1016/j.precamres.2007.03.006
DO - 10.1016/j.precamres.2007.03.006
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:34548472464
SN - 0301-9268
VL - 158
SP - 228
EP - 262
JO - Precambrian Research
JF - Precambrian Research
IS - 3-4
ER -