Lower Carboniferous Siderites: A Product of Bottom Seeps and Bacterial Metanogenesis (Subpolar Urals)


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Abstract

Complex modern micro- and spectroscopic methods for study of siderite concretions in the Lower Carboniferous terrigenous strata on the Kozhym River (Subpolar Urals) have shown that its formation was caused by destruction of clay minerals due to the activity of bacterial communities. The abundance of these bacteria was caused by gas–fluid seeps and bacterial methanogenesis processes in bottom deposits. In basins with normal marine fauna, this led to local desalination, hydrogen sulfide contamination, mass collapse of primary organisms, and the development of element-specific bacteria. The occurrence of these bacteria caused the formation of specific authigenic mineralization in the concretion of sideritic bacteriolites: the framboidal pyrite, sphalerite, galenite, barite, sulfoselenides, and tellurides.

About the authors

A. I. Antoshkina

Institute of Geology, Komi Science Center, Ural Branch; Syktyvkar State University

Author for correspondence.
Email: Antoshkina@geo.komisc.ru
Russian Federation, Syktyvkar, 167000; Syktyvkar, 167001

N. N. Ryabinkina

Institute of Geology, Komi Science Center, Ural Branch

Email: Antoshkina@geo.komisc.ru
Russian Federation, Syktyvkar, 167000

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