A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment

Subglacially erupted Neogene basaltic hyaloclastites in lava-fed deltas in Antarctica were found to contain putative endolithic microborings preserved in fresh glass along hydrous alteration boundaries. The location and existence over the past 6 Ma of these lava deltas has exposed them to successive...

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Main Authors: Cousins, CR, Smellie, JL, Jones, AP, Crawford, IA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1366169/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1366169 2023-05-15T13:59:47+02:00 A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment Cousins, CR Smellie, JL Jones, AP Crawford, IA 2009-08-03 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1366169/ unknown International Journal of Astrobiology , 8 (1) pp. 37-49. (2009) Article 2009 ftucl 2017-05-04T22:10:01Z Subglacially erupted Neogene basaltic hyaloclastites in lava-fed deltas in Antarctica were found to contain putative endolithic microborings preserved in fresh glass along hydrous alteration boundaries. The location and existence over the past 6 Ma of these lava deltas has exposed them to successive interglacials and subsequent percolation of the hyaloclastite with marine water. A statistical study of the hyaloclastites has found that endolithic microborings are distinctly more abundant within samples that show evidence for marine alteration, compared with those that have remained in a strictly freshwater (glacial) environment. Additionally, correlation between elevation and the abundance of microborings shows endolithic activity to be more prolific within lower elevation samples, where the hyaloclastites were influenced by marine fluids. Our study strongly suggests that endolithic microborings form more readily in marine-influenced, rather than freshwater environments. Indeed, marine fluids may be a necessary precondition for the microbial activity responsible. Thus, we suggest that the chemistry and origin of alteration fluids are controlling factors on the formation of endolithic microborings in basaltic glass. The study also contributes to the understanding of how endolithic microborings could be used as a biosignature on Mars, where basaltic lavas and aqueous alteration are known to have existed in the past. © 2009 Cambridge University Press. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica University College London: UCL Discovery
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
description Subglacially erupted Neogene basaltic hyaloclastites in lava-fed deltas in Antarctica were found to contain putative endolithic microborings preserved in fresh glass along hydrous alteration boundaries. The location and existence over the past 6 Ma of these lava deltas has exposed them to successive interglacials and subsequent percolation of the hyaloclastite with marine water. A statistical study of the hyaloclastites has found that endolithic microborings are distinctly more abundant within samples that show evidence for marine alteration, compared with those that have remained in a strictly freshwater (glacial) environment. Additionally, correlation between elevation and the abundance of microborings shows endolithic activity to be more prolific within lower elevation samples, where the hyaloclastites were influenced by marine fluids. Our study strongly suggests that endolithic microborings form more readily in marine-influenced, rather than freshwater environments. Indeed, marine fluids may be a necessary precondition for the microbial activity responsible. Thus, we suggest that the chemistry and origin of alteration fluids are controlling factors on the formation of endolithic microborings in basaltic glass. The study also contributes to the understanding of how endolithic microborings could be used as a biosignature on Mars, where basaltic lavas and aqueous alteration are known to have existed in the past. © 2009 Cambridge University Press.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cousins, CR
Smellie, JL
Jones, AP
Crawford, IA
spellingShingle Cousins, CR
Smellie, JL
Jones, AP
Crawford, IA
A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment
author_facet Cousins, CR
Smellie, JL
Jones, AP
Crawford, IA
author_sort Cousins, CR
title A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment
title_short A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment
title_full A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment
title_fullStr A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - Marine environment
title_sort comparative study of endolithic microborings in basaltic lavas from a transitional subglacial - marine environment
publishDate 2009
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1366169/
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_source International Journal of Astrobiology , 8 (1) pp. 37-49. (2009)
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