Massive expansion of marine archaea during a mid-Cretaceous oceanic anoxic event

Publication date

2001

Authors

Sinninghe Damsté, J.S.
Kuypers, M.M.M.
Blokker, P.
Erbacher, J.
Kinkel, H.
Pancost, R.D.
Schouten, S.

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Abstract

Biogeochemical and stable carbon isotopic analysis of black-shale sequences deposited during an Albian oceanic anoxic event (~112 million years ago) indicate that up to 80 weight percent of sedimentary organic carbon is derived from marine, nonthermophilic archaea. The carbon-13 content of archaeal molecular fossils indicates that these archaea were living chemoautotrophically. Their massive expansion may have been a response to the strong stratification of the ocean during this anoxic event. Indeed, the sedimentary record of archaeal membrane lipids suggests that this anoxic event marks a time in Earth history at which certain hyperthermophilic archaea adapted to low-temperature environments

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