2014
DOI: 10.1111/sed.12144
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Development of microbial carbonates in the Lower Cretaceous Codó Formation (north‐east Brazil): Implications for interpretation of microbialite facies associations and palaeoenvironmental conditions

Abstract: The study of microbial carbonates has acquired new significance with the recognition that they retain valuable information related to biomineralization processes associated with microbial activity throughout geological time. Additionally, microbialites have a demonstrated economic potential to serve as excellent hydrocarbon reservoirs. The Lower Cretaceous Cod o Formation, located in the Parnaiba Basin of north-east Brazil, comprises a unique stratigraphic sequence of up to 20 m thick, well-preserved carbonate… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
(49 reference statements)
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“…Other examples have been reported from the Miocene of New Zealand (Lindqvist, ), where they are associated with largely siliciclastic lake deposits, the Oligocene–Miocene of the French Central Massif (Bertrand‐Sarfati et al ., ; Roche et al ., ) and the Eocene Green River Formation in Utah, USA (Awramik & Buchheim, ; Chidsey et al ., ; Della Porta, ). Examples of Pre‐Cenozoic lacustrine stromatolites are scant with the exception of studies from the Cretaceous of the Gyeongsang Basin in Korea (Woo et al ., ; Nehza et al ., ) and the Cameros Basin in Spain (Suarez‐Gonzalez et al ., ), from the lower Cretaceous of the Codó Formation in Brazil (Bahniuk et al ., ), from the Upper Jurassic–Lower Cretaceous of Wessex Basin in the UK (Gallois et al ., ), from the Triassic of the Arnstadt Formation in Germany (Arp et al ., ) and from the late Archean in Western Australia (Awramik & Buchheim, ).…”
Section: Comparison With Other Lacustrine Microbialitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other examples have been reported from the Miocene of New Zealand (Lindqvist, ), where they are associated with largely siliciclastic lake deposits, the Oligocene–Miocene of the French Central Massif (Bertrand‐Sarfati et al ., ; Roche et al ., ) and the Eocene Green River Formation in Utah, USA (Awramik & Buchheim, ; Chidsey et al ., ; Della Porta, ). Examples of Pre‐Cenozoic lacustrine stromatolites are scant with the exception of studies from the Cretaceous of the Gyeongsang Basin in Korea (Woo et al ., ; Nehza et al ., ) and the Cameros Basin in Spain (Suarez‐Gonzalez et al ., ), from the lower Cretaceous of the Codó Formation in Brazil (Bahniuk et al ., ), from the Upper Jurassic–Lower Cretaceous of Wessex Basin in the UK (Gallois et al ., ), from the Triassic of the Arnstadt Formation in Germany (Arp et al ., ) and from the late Archean in Western Australia (Awramik & Buchheim, ).…”
Section: Comparison With Other Lacustrine Microbialitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Microbially created carbonate minerals may also result from the metabolic production of CO 2 ; these are best identified by a combination of textural, compositional and stable isotope studies. It is now recognized that some carbonate reservoirs only exist owing to microbial activity (Lipinski et al 2013;Bahniuk et al 2015).…”
Section: Eodiagenesis (Early/shallow Burial Diagenesis)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This difference is consistent with enhanced surface evaporation in closed lake basins after groundwater emergence from the springs (e.g. Bahniuk et al ., ; Horton et al ., ). Although this overall enrichment is less substantial than observed in some evaporative carbonates (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%