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Mineralization of Alvinella polychaete tubes at hydrothermal vents
Authors:M N Georgieva  C T S Little  A D Ball  A G Glover
Institution:1. School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK;2. Life Sciences Department, The Natural History Museum, London, UK;3. Imaging and Analysis Centre, The Natural History Museum, London, UK
Abstract:Alvinellid polychaete worms form multilayered organic tubes in the hottest and most rapidly growing areas of deep‐sea hydrothermal vent chimneys. Over short periods of time, these tubes can become entirely mineralized within this environment. Documenting the nature of this process in terms of the stages of mineralization, as well as the mineral textures and end products that result, is essential for our understanding of the fossilization of polychaetes at hydrothermal vents. Here, we report in detail the full mineralization of Alvinella spp. tubes collected from the East Pacific Rise, determined through the use of a wide range of imaging and analytical techniques. We propose a new model for tube mineralization, whereby mineralization begins as templating of tube layer and sublayer surfaces and results in fully mineralized tubes comprised of multiple concentric, colloform, pyrite bands. Silica appeared to preserve organic tube layers in some samples. Fine‐scale features such as protein fibres, extracellular polymeric substances and two types of filamentous microbial colonies were also found to be well preserved within a subset of the tubes. The fully mineralized Alvinella spp. tubes do not closely resemble known ancient hydrothermal vent tube fossils, corroborating molecular evidence suggesting that the alvinellids are a relatively recent polychaete lineage. We also compare pyrite and silica preservation of organic tissues within hydrothermal vents to soft tissue preservation in sediments and hot springs.
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