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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Africa
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Southern Africa
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Barberton greenstone belt (2)
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Kaapvaal Craton (1)
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South Africa (2)
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Arctic region
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Greenland
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Australasia
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Australia
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Western Australia
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Pilbara (1)
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Pilbara Craton (12)
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Yilgarn Craton (1)
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commodities
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barite deposits (3)
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bitumens (1)
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metal ores
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gold ores (1)
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lead-zinc deposits (1)
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lithium ores (1)
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tantalum ores (1)
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tin ores (1)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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O-18/O-16 (1)
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S-34/S-32 (1)
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silicon
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sulfur
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fossils
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Invertebrata (1)
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Warrawoona Group (17)
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upper Precambrian
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Primary terms
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absolute age (3)
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Africa
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Southern Africa
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Barberton greenstone belt (2)
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Kaapvaal Craton (1)
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South Africa (2)
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Arctic region
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Greenland
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Isua Belt (1)
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Australasia
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Australia
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Western Australia
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North Pole Deposit (1)
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Pilbara (1)
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Pilbara Craton (12)
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Yilgarn Craton (1)
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barite deposits (3)
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bitumens (1)
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carbon
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C-13/C-12 (2)
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organic carbon (1)
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crust (2)
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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granites (1)
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volcanic rocks
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basalts (2)
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inclusions
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fluid inclusions (1)
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intrusions (2)
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Invertebrata (1)
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isotopes
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stable isotopes
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C-13/C-12 (2)
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N-15/N-14 (1)
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O-18/O-16 (1)
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S-34/S-32 (1)
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Si-30/Si-28 (1)
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magmas (1)
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metal ores
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copper ores (1)
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gold ores (1)
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lead-zinc deposits (1)
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lithium ores (1)
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tantalum ores (1)
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tin ores (1)
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metals
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rare earths (1)
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metamorphic rocks
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eclogite (1)
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metaigneous rocks
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metabasalt (1)
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metaplutonic rocks (1)
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metasedimentary rocks (1)
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metavolcanic rocks (1)
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metamorphism (3)
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nitrogen
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paleoecology (2)
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plate tectonics (1)
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Precambrian
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Archean
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Kromberg Formation (1)
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Mesoarchean (1)
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Paleoarchean (6)
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Warrawoona Group (17)
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Fortescue Group (1)
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Hamersley Group (1)
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Onverwacht Group (2)
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upper Precambrian
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Proterozoic
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Paleoproterozoic (1)
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Witwatersrand Supergroup (1)
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problematic fossils
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clastic rocks
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shale (1)
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sedimentary structures
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soft sediment deformation (1)
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sedimentation (3)
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silicon
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stratigraphy (1)
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sulfur
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S-34/S-32 (1)
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tectonics (3)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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dolostone (1)
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chemically precipitated rocks
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chert (7)
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iron formations
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banded iron formations (1)
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clastic rocks
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sandstone (1)
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shale (1)
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volcaniclastics (2)
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sedimentary structures
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sedimentary structures
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biogenic structures
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algal structures
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algal mats (1)
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stromatolites (3)
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planar bedding structures
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bedding (1)
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laminations (2)
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soft sediment deformation (1)
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sediments
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sediments (1)
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volcaniclastics (2)
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Warrawoona Group
Archaean basin margin geology and crustal evolution: an East Pilbara traverse
Sedimentology and geochemistry of Archean silica granules
Graphitic Carbons and Biosignatures
Hematite replacement of iron-bearing precursor sediments in the 3.46-b.y.-old Marble Bar Chert, Pilbara craton, Australia
A deep subaqueous fan depositional model for the Palaeoarchaean (3.46 Ga) Marble Bar Cherts, Warrawoona Group, Western Australia
Early Archean Hot Springs above Epithermal Veins, North Pole, Western Australia: New Insights from Fluid Inclusion Microanalysis
The structure and distribution of carbon in 3.5 Ga Apex chert: Implications for the biogenicity of Earth’s oldest putative microfossils
A multidisciplinary study of silicified volcanoclastic, near-shore deposits from the 3.446 Ga “Kitty's Gap Chert,” Warrawoona Group, Pilbara, reveals that they contain a wealth of carbonaceous microbial fossil remains. The volcanoclastic sediments host predominantly colonies of coccoidal microorganisms that occur in two modal size ranges, 0.4–0.5 μm and 0.75–0.8 μm. These microbial colonies coat the surfaces of the volcanic particles and form either dense, carpetlike associations up to tens of micrometers in diameter comprising hundreds of individuals. They also form less dense concentrations that include many chainlike associations of coccoids. All colonies are associated with a polymer film (extracellular polymeric substances—EPS) that coats both the organisms and their substrate. Multispecies biofilms formed at a boundary representing a short period of nondeposition. They consisted predominantly of coccoids and EPS but also included common, small filaments tens of micrometers in length and 0.25 μm in width and rare, short rods 1 μm in length. Carbon isotopic compositions of about −26‰ to −30‰, measured on individual layers, are compatible with microbial fractionation. The biofilms include possible anoxygenic-photosynthesizing organisms (the filaments), whereas the colonies coating the volcanic clasts probably represent chemolithotrophic organisms. The interaction between the microbes, their colonies and biofilms, and their environment is intimate and complex. The environment provided the substrate and the nutrient, energy, and carbon sources, whereas the metabolic activity of the microbes contributed to the early diagenetic alteration of the volcanic particles, to the binding of the sediment, and to their silicification. The microorganisms were preserved by rapid silicification, with the silica coming partly from hydrothermal sources and partly from pore water enrichment in Si due to the devitrification of the volcanic protoliths (partially mediated by microbial activity). Our multidisciplinary approach to the study of this sample demonstrates the importance of using complementary methods in order to understand the complex microbe/sediment interactions and to be able to relate different types of microbial colonies/biofilms to different microenvironments. The observations and conclusions from this study have important consequences for the methods that need to be used in the search for traces of past life in general and especially in the search for past life on other planets such as Mars.
Four cherts sampled in the East Pilbara craton (Western Australia) at Marble Bar (Towers Formation), North Pole Dome (Dresser and Apex Basalt Formation), and Kittys Gap (Panorama Formation) were studied for micro- and nanomineralogy and geochemistry to determine their protoliths and to provide new insights on the physico-chemical and biological conditions of their depositional environments. The Marble Bar chert was formed at the interface with a basaltic rock. Hydrothermal fluids leached major and trace elements from the basalt and silicified the protolith of this chert. The elements Fe, Mn, Si, Ca, Mg, REE, Au, Pd, Cr, and Ni precipitated as a microbanded iron formation (BIF) under reducing and alkaline conditions. The chert is composed of magnetite, carbonates, and quartz and forms a stromatolite-like structure. Later oxidizing fluids replaced magnetite and carbonates with Fe-Mn oxyhydroxides. They show vermicular microtextures and filamentous nanotextures. Each filament is composed of euhedral nanoscopic hematite. These oxides contain several thousands of ppm of N and C, and measured C/N ratios are similar to those observed in organic matter preserved in marine sediments, thus suggesting an organic activity. Two black cherts from hydrothermal dykes of the North Pole Dome are interpreted as having had a black shale precursor, based on the REE (rare earth elements) and trace metal characteristics. These rocks were probably entrained into the dykes and hydrothermally overprinted. Although these two cherts had the same history, the physico-chemical conditions differed during their formation. The chert from the chert-barite unit of the Dresser Formation was formed under reducing and alkaline conditions. This is clearly indicated by clusters of nanosulfide spherules replacing precursor minerals; weblike Fe-sulfides intergrown with sphalerite; As-pyrite and vaesite; and the presence of carbonates. The black chert from the Apex Basalt Formation was formed under oxidizing conditions, as indicated by clusters of nanospherules of Fe-oxides and a negative Ce anomaly. A black and white laminated chert from Kittys Gap was formed in a shallow marine to subaerial environment, by silicification of a rhyodacitic volcaniclastic rock. This process was accompanied by the development of microbial mats on the sediment surfaces and the formation of microbial colonies around precursor K-feldspars, Ti-bearing biotites, amphiboles, and ghost spherulites. The environment was slightly oxidizing, as indicated by the negative Ce anomaly and the presence of Ti-oxides. The presence of K-bearing phyllosilicates rather than K-feldspars indicates that the environment was also slightly acidic. Elevated Cu and Zn contents in the black laminae point to a limited influence from hydrothermal fluids. The silica probably originated mainly from alteration of the minerals of the volcaniclastic rock due to diagenetic alteration by seawater.