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1 Geology Department, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand
2 Impacts and Astromaterials Research Centre, Department of Earth Science and Engineering, South Kensington Campus, Imperial College, University of London, London SW7 2AZ, UK
3 Geology Department, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand
4 Energy and Geosciences Institute, University of Utah, 423 Wakara Way, Suite 300, Salt Lake City, Utah 84108, USA
Siliceous sinters form where nearly neutral pH, alkali chloride waters discharge at the surface (
100 °C). They may preserve biogenic and abiogenic material and therefore archive paleoenvironmental settings. Freshly precipitated sinters undergo diagenesis through a five-step series of silica mineral phase changes, from opal-A to opal-A/CT to opal-CT to opal-C to quartz. Transformation rates vary among sinters because postdepositional conditions can accelerate or retard diagenesis, meanwhile preserving or destroying biosignals. We monitored alteration and diagenesis of newly precipitated, filamentous microbe-rich sinter during a two-year field experiment, where sinter was suspended inside a fumarole at Orakei Korako, Taupo volcanic zone, New Zealand. Patchy and complex diagenesis resulted from changes in environmental conditions, including variations in temperature, pH, and the intermittent deposition of sulfur. Throughout the experiment, opal-A was dissolved by acidic steam condensate, and reprecipitated locally. Quartz crystals grew on the sinter surface within 21 weeks. Previous reports of transformation rates from opal to quartz are on the order of thousands of years in duration. Thus, our results show that fumarolic overprinting accelerates diagenesis. Microbial preservation was not favorable because primary filamentous fabrics were obscured by deposition of opal-A microspheres, smooth silica infill, and sulfur. If ancient hydrothermal systems were among the likely places where early life flourished, it is necessary to distinguish between depositional features and those inherited during diagenesis. This nearreal time experiment enabled observations on environmental controls of diagenetic change in silica minerals and illustrated the variability of conditions that can occur in nature during this complex process.
Key Words: diagenesis hot spring sinter microbial filaments opal-A quartz fumarole organomineral biomineral silica
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