Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.

Three thermal springs, at Lýsuhóll on Snæfellnes Peninsula on the west coast of Iceland, with vent water temperatures of 20 to 46°C are characterized by thriving microbial mats that mediate the precipitation of opal-A, Fe-rich opal-A, Fe-rich reticulate coatings, and calcite that are intermixed with...

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Main Authors: Jones, B., Renaut, R.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7939/R3FJ29T8H
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/ba2ee5dd-12d0-4edd-bbea-faf5d20e5551
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.68yjor 2023-05-15T16:48:43+02:00 Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth. Jones, B. Renaut, R. 2017-01-01 https://doi.org/10.7939/R3FJ29T8H https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/ba2ee5dd-12d0-4edd-bbea-faf5d20e5551 en eng doi:10.7939/R3FJ29T8H 10670/1.68yjor https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/ba2ee5dd-12d0-4edd-bbea-faf5d20e5551 ERA : Education and Research Archive geo envir Other https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_1843/ 2017 fttriple https://doi.org/10.7939/R3FJ29T8H 2023-01-22T17:51:21Z Three thermal springs, at Lýsuhóll on Snæfellnes Peninsula on the west coast of Iceland, with vent water temperatures of 20 to 46°C are characterized by thriving microbial mats that mediate the precipitation of opal-A, Fe-rich opal-A, Fe-rich reticulate coatings, and calcite that are intermixed with each other at micro- to macro-scales. Although many of the microbes are preserved by silicification, there is no evidence of preservation by calcification. The calcite crystals that grew in the confines of the microbial mats, despite not being perfectly formed and < 1 mm long, can be divided into prismatic forms (types I to III), trigonal prisms, dodecahedrons, plates, rhombic forms (types I to III), and dendrites. Apart from the dendrites, all of the other crystals are mesocrystals formed of nanocrystals that are aligned in perfect crystallographic registers. All of these crystals grew through the non-classical crystal growth model, which is a particle-based system. In this case, the growth of the nanocrystals and the development of the mesocrystals took place in the microdomains that developed in the biofilms. Recognition of this type of crystal growth in older spring deposits may be difficult because (1) the mesocrystals may be transformed to monocrystals by fusion of the nanocrystals, (2) evidence of the microbes and biofilms may be missing because they are commonly lost to decay before preservation by calcification can take place, and/or (3) these mesocrystals may become the main nucleation centers for larger calcite crystals that grow via the classical crystal growth model. Irrespective of these nuances, the possibility that calcite crystals initially developed as mesocrystals should be a critical consideration in the evaluation of any spring system where calcite is being precipitated. Other/Unknown Material Iceland Unknown Lýsuhóll ENVELOPE(-23.223,-23.223,64.840,64.840)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic geo
envir
spellingShingle geo
envir
Jones, B.
Renaut, R.
Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.
topic_facet geo
envir
description Three thermal springs, at Lýsuhóll on Snæfellnes Peninsula on the west coast of Iceland, with vent water temperatures of 20 to 46°C are characterized by thriving microbial mats that mediate the precipitation of opal-A, Fe-rich opal-A, Fe-rich reticulate coatings, and calcite that are intermixed with each other at micro- to macro-scales. Although many of the microbes are preserved by silicification, there is no evidence of preservation by calcification. The calcite crystals that grew in the confines of the microbial mats, despite not being perfectly formed and < 1 mm long, can be divided into prismatic forms (types I to III), trigonal prisms, dodecahedrons, plates, rhombic forms (types I to III), and dendrites. Apart from the dendrites, all of the other crystals are mesocrystals formed of nanocrystals that are aligned in perfect crystallographic registers. All of these crystals grew through the non-classical crystal growth model, which is a particle-based system. In this case, the growth of the nanocrystals and the development of the mesocrystals took place in the microdomains that developed in the biofilms. Recognition of this type of crystal growth in older spring deposits may be difficult because (1) the mesocrystals may be transformed to monocrystals by fusion of the nanocrystals, (2) evidence of the microbes and biofilms may be missing because they are commonly lost to decay before preservation by calcification can take place, and/or (3) these mesocrystals may become the main nucleation centers for larger calcite crystals that grow via the classical crystal growth model. Irrespective of these nuances, the possibility that calcite crystals initially developed as mesocrystals should be a critical consideration in the evaluation of any spring system where calcite is being precipitated.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Jones, B.
Renaut, R.
author_facet Jones, B.
Renaut, R.
author_sort Jones, B.
title Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.
title_short Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.
title_full Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.
title_fullStr Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.
title_full_unstemmed Modern travertine precipitation at Lýsuhóll hot springs, Snæfellnes, Iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.
title_sort modern travertine precipitation at lýsuhóll hot springs, snæfellnes, iceland: implications for calcite crystal growth.
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.7939/R3FJ29T8H
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/ba2ee5dd-12d0-4edd-bbea-faf5d20e5551
long_lat ENVELOPE(-23.223,-23.223,64.840,64.840)
geographic Lýsuhóll
geographic_facet Lýsuhóll
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source ERA : Education and Research Archive
op_relation doi:10.7939/R3FJ29T8H
10670/1.68yjor
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/ba2ee5dd-12d0-4edd-bbea-faf5d20e5551
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7939/R3FJ29T8H
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