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Microbially induced potassium enrichment in Paleoproterozoic shales and implications for reverse weathering on early Earth.

Jérémie AubineauAbderrazak El AlbaniAndrey BekkerAndrea SomogyiOlabode M BankoleRoberto MacchiarelliAlain MeunierArmelle RiboulleauJean-Yves ReynaudKurt O Konhauser
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Illitisation requires potassium incorporation into a smectite precursor, a process akin to reverse weathering. However, it remains unclear whether microbes facilitate K+ uptake to the sediments and whether illitisation was important in the geological past. The 2.1 billion-year-old Francevillian Series of Gabon has been shown to host mat-related structures (MRS) and, in this regard, these rocks offer a unique opportunity to test whether ancient microbes induced illitisation. Here, we show high K content confined to illite particles that are abundant in the facies bearing MRS, but not in the host sandstone and black shale. This observation suggests that microbial biofilms trapped K+ from the seawater and released it into the pore-waters during respiration, resulting in illitisation. The K-rich illite developed exclusively in the fossilized MRS thus provides a new biosignature for metasediments derived from K-feldspar-depleted rocks that were abundant crustal components on ancient Earth.
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