MG FRACTIONATION IN CRUSTOSE CORALLINE ALGAE: GEOCHEMICAL, BIOLOGICAL, AND SEDIMENTOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS OF SECULAR VARIATION IN THE MG/CA RATIO OF SEAWATER

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dc.contributor.author Ries J.B.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-08-26T05:22:24Z
dc.date.available 2024-08-26T05:22:24Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=12091919
dc.identifier.citation Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 2006, 70, 4, 891-900
dc.identifier.issn 0016-7037
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/44735
dc.description.abstract The Mg/Ca ratio of seawater has varied significantly throughout the Phanerozoic Eon, primarily as a function of the rate of ocean crust production. Specimens of the crustose coralline alga Neogoniolithon sp. were grown in artificial seawaters encompassing the range of Mg/Ca ratios shown to have existed throughout the Phanerozoic. Significantly, the coralline algae’s skeletal Mg/Ca ratio varied in lockstep with the Mg/Ca ratio of the artificial seawater. Specimens grown in seawater treatments formulated with identical Mg/Ca ratios but differing absolute concentrations of Mg and Ca exhibited no significant differences in skeletal Mg/Ca ratios, thereby emphasizing the importance of the ambient Mg/Ca ratio, and not the absolute concentration of Mg, in determining the Mg/Ca ratio of coralline algal calcite. Specimens grown in seawater of the lowest molar Mg/Ca ratio (mMg/Ca = 1.0) actually changed their skeletal mineralogy from high-Mg (skeletal mMg/Ca > 0.04) to low-Mg calcite (skeletal mMg/Ca < 0.04), suggesting that ancient calcitic red algae, which exhibit morphologies and modes of calcification comparable to Neogoniolithon sp., would have produced low-Mg calcite from the middle Cambrian to middle Mississippian and during the middle to Late Cretaceous, when oceanic mMg/Ca approached unity. By influencing the original Mg content of carbonate facies in which these algae have been ubiquitous, this condition has significant implications for the geochemistry and diagenesis of algal limestones throughout most of the Phanerozoic. The crustose coralline algae’s precipitation of high-Mg calcite from seawater that favors the abiotic precipitation of aragonite indicates that these algae dictate the precipitation of the calcitic polymorph of CaCO3. However, the algae’s nearly abiotic pattern of Mg fractionation in their skeletal calcite suggests that their biomineralogical control is limited to polymorph specification and is generally ineffectual in the regulation of skeletal Mg incorporation. Therefore, the Mg/Ca ratio of well-preserved fossils of crustose coralline algae, when corrected for the effect of seawater temperature, may be an archive of oceanic Mg/Ca throughout the Phanerozoic. Magnesium fractionation algorithms that model algal skeletal Mg/Ca as a function of seawater Mg/Ca and temperature are presented herein. The results of this study support the empirical fossil evidence that secular variation of oceanic Mg/Ca has caused the mineralogy and skeletal chemistry of many calcifying marine organisms to change significantly over geologic time. ? 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
dc.subject CALCIUM
dc.subject CORALLINE ALGA
dc.subject FRACTIONATION
dc.subject MAGNESIUM
dc.subject SEAWATER
dc.subject SECULAR VARIATION
dc.subject ALGAE
dc.subject NEOGONIOLITHON
dc.subject RHODOPHYTA
dc.subject Cretaceous
dc.subject Cambrian
dc.subject Mississippian
dc.title MG FRACTIONATION IN CRUSTOSE CORALLINE ALGAE: GEOCHEMICAL, BIOLOGICAL, AND SEDIMENTOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS OF SECULAR VARIATION IN THE MG/CA RATIO OF SEAWATER
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.gca.2005.10.025
dc.subject.age Mesozoic::Cretaceous
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Cambrian
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Carboniferous::Mississippian


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