Microbial mediation and climatic control on dolomite precipitation in a hypersaline lake: Insights from Salinas Lake, southern Iberia
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Li, Guolai; Naim, Zeina; Gibert, Luis; Stuut, Jan-Berend; Waajen, Annemiek C.; Jiménez Moreno, Gonzalo; Sánchez-Román, MónicaEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Bacteria Geochemistry Lacustrine dolomite
Date
2026Referencia bibliográfica
Li, G., Naim, Z., Gibert, L., Stuut, J.-B., Waajen, A.C., Jimenez-Moreno, G. et al. (2026) Microbial mediation and climatic control on dolomite precipitation in a hypersaline lake: Insights from Salinas Lake, southern Iberia. The Depositional Record, 12, e70058. https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.70058
Patrocinador
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (OCENW.KLEIN.037 and ENW.GO.001.033)Résumé
This study examines the climatic controls on dolomite precipitation through a
multiproxy investigation of a carbonate-rich sediment core from Salinas Lake,
a hypersaline playa in Alicante, south-eastern Iberia. The ~120,000year record
captures depositional cycles and palaeoenvironmental changes driven by late
Pleistocene to Holocene climate variability. Integrated analyses of sedimentology,
lithology, geochemistry (elemental concentrations, total organic carbon, stable
carbon and oxygen isotopes), scanning electron microscopy, microbial community
characterisation and palynology reconstruct lake hydrology and its influence on
carbonate mineralogy. The sediment succession is marked by alternating calciteand dolomite-rich intervals, with dolomite crystals displaying morphological
evolution from spherical to rhombohedral forms with depth. Stable isotope
signatures (δ13C: −6.5‰ to −2.4‰ VPDB; δ18O: −2.3‰ to +4.9‰ VPDB), alongside
microbial structures such as extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) and
internal crystal voids, suggest a biologically mediated precipitation mechanism.
These mineralogical shifts closely correspond to rapid hydrological changes
driven by Dansgaard–Oeschger climate oscillations, with dolomite formation
favoured under arid, evaporative conditions that concentrate Mg and Ca ions and
promote microbial mat development. Halophilic microbial communities, capable
of catalysing carbonate precipitation, probably enhance dolomite nucleation
and growth through EPS production and geochemical modulation. This work
underscores the complex interplay between climate, hydrology, microbial activity
and sedimentary mineral formation, providing new insights into the longstanding
‘dolomite problem’ within sedimentary environments.





