Scientific Reports (Dec 2024)

Spongy-looking microfabrics in the earliest named stromatolite represent deep burial alteration and incipient metamorphism

  • Fritz Neuweiler,
  • Mathias Mueller,
  • Benjamin F. Walter,
  • Ed Landing,
  • Aratz Beranoaguirre,
  • Consuelo Sendino,
  • Lisa Amati,
  • Stephen Kershaw

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-83359-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract The earliest named stromatolite Cryptozoon Hall, 1884 (Late Cambrian, ca. 490 Ma, eastern New York State), was recently re-interpreted as an interlayered microbial mat and non-spiculate (keratosan) sponge deposit. This “classic stromatolite” is prominent in a fundamental debate concerning the significance or even existence of non-spiculate sponges in carbonate rocks from the Neoproterozoic (Tonian) onwards. Cryptozoon has three types of microbially-induced carbonate layers: clotted-pelletoidal micrite with microbial filaments, clotted-pelletoidal micrite with vesicular structure, and dense microcrystalline laminae. A fourth, stratiform to patchy fabric comprises suspect sponges. Using contextual fabric analysis, elemental mapping, cathodoluminescence, fluid inclusions, electron backscatter diffraction, U–Pb dating, and burial history, the sponge interpretation is denied. Neither a distinct sponge body outline nor a canal system is identifiable. Instead, the suspect fabric is secondary in origin, and best explained as a product of Carboniferous (Mississippian) deep burial alteration associated with basement reactivation. Key petrographic observations include heterogenous recrystallization via aggrading Ostwald ripening with interfingering reaction fronts typical for partially miscible fluids, a granoblastic calcite texture (incipient metamorphism), and subsequent hypidioblastic white mica (arguably Carboniferous/Permian, Alleghenian orogeny). Topotype Cryptozoon is a stromatolite altered to sub-greenschist metacarbonate. The published Tonian to Phanerozoic record of interpreted non-spiculate sponges requires reassessment.

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