CRYSTAL-SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS AND POSSIBLE BIOGENIC ORIGIN OF FE SULFIDES

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dc.contributor.author Pósfai M.
dc.contributor.author Cziner K.
dc.contributor.author Márton E.
dc.contributor.author Márton P.
dc.contributor.author Buseck P.R.P.R.
dc.contributor.author Frankel R.B.
dc.contributor.author Bazylinski D.A.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-04-05T02:40:12Z
dc.date.available 2021-04-05T02:40:12Z
dc.date.issued 2001
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=13972516
dc.identifier.citation European Journal of Mineralogy, 2001, 13, 4, 691-703
dc.identifier.issn 0935-1221
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/27285
dc.description.abstract Sedimentary greigite (Fe3S4) can form either by ''biologically controlled'' or by ''biologically induced mineralization'' (BCM and BIM, respectively). In order to identify the origin of magnetic Fe sulfides, we studied and compared the sizes and morphologies of greigite crystals produced by a magnetotactic microorganism (previously described and referred to as the ''many-celled magnetotactic prokaryote'', MMP) and Fe sulfides from two specimens of Miocene sedimentary rocks (from Łaka, in the foredeep of the Western Carpathians and from Michalovce, in the Transcarpathian Depression). Greigite grains from the MMP and the Łaka rock show nearly Gaussian crystal-size distributions (CSDs), whereas the CSD is lognormal for Fe sulfides from the Michalovce rock. We simulated various crystal-growth mechanisms and matched the calculated and observed CSDs; crystals from the MMP and the Łaka rock have CSDs that are consistent with random growth of crystal nuclei in an open system, whereas the CSD of the Michalovce Fe sulfides is consistent with surface-controlled growth followed by supply-controlled growth in an open system. On the basis of CSDs and characteristic contrast features in the transmission electron microscope, greigite in the Łaka rock is likely of BCM origin, whereas the Fe sulfide crystals in the other rock sample were produced by BIM processes. Our results indicate that the methods we applied in this study may contribute to the identification of the origin of magnetic Fe sulfide minerals in sedimentary rocks.
dc.subject greigite
dc.subject magnetotactic bacteria
dc.subject biologically controlled mineralization
dc.subject biologically induced mineralization
dc.subject crystal size distribution
dc.title CRYSTAL-SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS AND POSSIBLE BIOGENIC ORIGIN OF FE SULFIDES
dc.type Статья


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