LIVING MICROBIAL ECOSYSTEMS WITHIN THE ACTIVE ZONE OF CATAGENESIS: IMPLICATIONS FOR FEEDING THE DEEP BIOSPHERE

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Horsfield B.
dc.contributor.author Zink K.
dc.contributor.author Ondrak R.
dc.contributor.author Dieckmann V.
dc.contributor.author Kallmeyer J.
dc.contributor.author Mangelsdorf K.
dc.contributor.author Primio R.Di.
dc.contributor.author Wilkes H.
dc.contributor.author Schenk H.J.
dc.contributor.author Parkes R.J.
dc.contributor.author Fry J.
dc.contributor.author Cragg B.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-10-14T08:52:05Z
dc.date.available 2024-10-14T08:52:05Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14681333
dc.identifier.citation Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2006, 246, 1-2, 55-69
dc.identifier.issn 0012-821X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/45842
dc.description.abstract Earth's largest reactive carbon pool, marine sedimentary organic matter, becomes increasingly recalcitrant during burial, making it almost inaccessible as a substrate for microorganisms, and thereby limiting metabolic activity in the deep biosphere. Because elevated temperature acting over geological time leads to the massive thermal breakdown of the organic matter into volatiles, including petroleum, the question arises whether microorganisms can directly utilize these maturation products as a substrate. While migrated thermogenic fluids are known to sustain microbial consortia in shallow sediments, an in situ coupling of abiotic generation and microbial utilization has not been demonstrated. Here we show, using a combination of basin modelling, kinetic modelling, geomicrobiology and biogeochemistry, that microorganisms inhabit the active generation zone in the Nankai Trough, offshore Japan. Three sites from ODP Leg 190 have been evaluated, namely 1173, 1174 and 1177, drilled in nearly undeformed Quaternary and Tertiary sedimentary sequences seaward of the Nankai Trough itself. Paleotemperatures were reconstructed based on subsidence profiles, compaction modelling, present-day heat flow, downhole temperature measurements and organic maturity parameters. Today's heat flow distribution can be considered mainly conductive, and is extremely high in places, reaching 180 mW/m2. The kinetic parameters describing total hydrocarbon generation, determined by laboratory pyrolysis experiments, were utilized by the model in order to predict the timing of generation in time and space. The model predicts that the onset of present day generation lies between 300 and 500 m below sea floor (5100-5300 m below mean sea level), depending on well location. In the case of Site 1174, 5-10% conversion has taken place by a present day temperature of ca. 85 °C. Predictions were largely validated by on-site hydrocarbon gas measurements. Viable organisms in the same depth range have been proven using 14C-radiolabelled substrates for methanogenesis, bacterial cell counts and intact phospholipids. Altogether, these results point to an overlap of abiotic thermal degradation reactions going on in the same part of the sedimentary column as where a deep biosphere exists. The organic matter preserved in Nankai Trough sediments is of the type that generates putative feedstocks for microbial activity, namely oxygenated compounds and hydrocarbons. Furthermore, the rates of thermal degradation calculated from the kinetic model closely resemble rates of respiration and electron donor consumption independently measured in other deep biosphere environments. We deduce that abiotically driven degradation reactions have provided substrates for microbial activity in deep sediments at this convergent continental margin. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
dc.subject BASIN MODELLING
dc.subject BIO-GEO COUPLING
dc.subject BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
dc.subject DEEP BIOSPHERE
dc.subject GEOMICROBIOLOGY
dc.subject NANKAI TROUGH
dc.subject Quaternary
dc.title LIVING MICROBIAL ECOSYSTEMS WITHIN THE ACTIVE ZONE OF CATAGENESIS: IMPLICATIONS FOR FEEDING THE DEEP BIOSPHERE
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.epsl.2006.03.040
dc.subject.age Cenozoic::Quaternary
dc.subject.age Четвертичный


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • ELibrary
    Метаданные публикаций с сайта https://www.elibrary.ru

Show simple item record