The 2.1 Ga Old Francevillian Biota: Biogenicity, Taphonomy and Biodiversity
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PLOS ONE
Date
2014Referencia bibliográfica
El Albani A, Bengtson S, Canfield DE, Riboulleau A, Rollion Bard C, et al. (2014) The 2.1 Ga Old Francevillian Biota: Biogenicity, Taphonomy and Biodiversity. PLOS ONE 9(6): e99438. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0099438
Sponsorship
University of Poitiers; Centre National pour la Recherche Scientifique and Fond Europe´en pour le De´veloppement Re´gionalAbstract
The Paleoproterozoic Era witnessed crucial steps in the evolution of Earth’s surface environments following the first
appreciable rise of free atmospheric oxygen concentrations ,2.3 to 2.1 Ga ago, and concomitant shallow ocean
oxygenation. While most sedimentary successions deposited during this time interval have experienced thermal
overprinting from burial diagenesis and metamorphism, the ca. 2.1 Ga black shales of the Francevillian B Formation (FB2)
cropping out in southeastern Gabon have not. The Francevillian Formation contains centimeter-sized structures interpreted
as organized and spatially discrete populations of colonial organisms living in an oxygenated marine ecosystem. Here, new
material from the FB2 black shales is presented and analyzed to further explore its biogenicity and taphonomy. Our
extended record comprises variably sized, shaped, and structured pyritized macrofossils of lobate, elongated, and rodshaped morphologies as well as abundant non-pyritized disk-shaped macrofossils and organic-walled acritarchs. Combined
microtomography, geochemistry, and sedimentary analysis suggest a biota fossilized during early diagenesis. The
emergence of this biota follows a rise in atmospheric oxygen, which is consistent with the idea that surface oxygenation
allowed the evolution and ecological expansion of complex megascopic life.