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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 936: 173347, 2024 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38763200

ABSTRACT

Karst corrosion of carbonate rocks by water with dissolved gases proceeds in most cases along two major scenarios: (i) meteoric water absorbs CO2 from soil and atmosphere, or (ii) ascending water of deep circulation carries with it dissolved endogenous gases, mainly CO2 and H2S. We have observed a peculiar variant where meteoric water absorbs ascending endogenous gases at a natural gas vent on a travertine mound in Slovakia. Carbonate dissolution's extreme effectiveness is demonstrated by mineralization of rainwater ponded at a gas vent, rising to 3.2 g/L of dissolved solids shortly after the rainfall. One liter of water ponded at the vent and mixing with the venting gas, dissolved up to 800 mg of calcium at a rate exceeding 5.8 mg/L·min. Limestone tablets placed at the vent show signs of significant corrosion, at rates up to 126 mm/ka. The rate is comparable to those in coastal karst, where freshwater is mixing with seawater and to those in sulfuric acid speleogenesis (SAS), both the highest hitherto known rates of karst corrosion in carbonates. The geomorphic effects of the process described are depressions on the surface of travertine near the vents of endogenous CO2. This type of corrosion seems to be universal and probably occurs everywhere where endogenous CO2 is exhaled to the surface from carbonate rocks.

2.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 11663, 2023 07 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37468551

ABSTRACT

Travertines, which precipitate from high temperature water saturated with calcium carbonate, are generally considered to be dominated by physico-chemical and microbial precipitates. Here, as an additional influence on organomineral formation, metagenomic data and microscopic analyses clearly demonstrate that highly diverse viral, bacterial and archaeal communities occur in the biofilms associated with several modern classic travertine sites in Europe and Asia, along with virus-like particles. Metagenomic analysis reveals that bacteriophages (bacterial viruses) containing icosahedral capsids and belonging to the Siphoviridae, Myoviridae and Podoviridae families are the most abundant of all viral strains, although the bacteriophage distribution does vary across the sampling sites. Icosahedral shapes of capsids are also the most frequently observed under the microscope, occurring as non-mineralized through to mineralized viruses and virus-like particles. Viruses are initially mineralized by Ca-Si amorphous precipitates with subordinate Mg and Al contents; these then alter to nanospheroids composed of Ca carbonate with minor silicate 80-300 nm in diameter. Understanding the roles of bacteriophages in modern carbonate-saturated settings and related organomineralization processes is critical for their broader inclusion in the geological record and ecosystem models.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophages , Podoviridae , Siphoviridae , Viruses , Humans , Ecosystem , Bacteriophages/genetics , Podoviridae/ultrastructure , Siphoviridae/genetics , Siphoviridae/ultrastructure
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