Authors:
Tosti et al
Abstract:
A thin (~ 50 cm) horizon of sinuous stromatolites occurs within a succession of elongate upright columns in the ~ 1.4 Ga Tieling Formation, near Jixian, China. The upright columns form aligned closely spaced ridges, separated by narrow runnels with signs of current scour. The sinuous and upright stromatolites, and their intervening matrix, were originally mainly composed of carbonate mud. In end-on view, the sinuous columns incline back and forth. Each column consists of well-defined laminae that successively rotate relative to column curvature, maintaining their orientation approximately at right-angles to the column axis. In inclined parts of the columns, laminae are typically asymmetric and the steeper side faces the direction of column inclination. We interpret this column sinuosity to be a response to changes in current-direction, with accreting laminae facing into currents that supplied sediment. We find no evidence for heliotropism (mat growth towards the sun) in these examples. Adjacent columns typically show similar shapes, bending back and forth together, but their angles of curvature and inclination can change laterally from column to column, from near vertical to 45°, over distances of 30 cm. Columns can show breakage and separation of adjacent laminae. Some of this is enhanced by compaction and stress, but the occurrence of sinuous columns on their sides or upturned, in spaces between undisturbed columns, indicates that column curvature developed during growth and that toppling of columns was syndepositional. We infer that sinuosity developed in response to changes in current direction, that column inclination reflects current strength, and that breakage and toppling was produced by strong currents. Curved and sinuous columns could reflect shoaling. This would also have exposed them to storm damage and to the effects of currents that scoured sufficient matrix to locally break and topple columns. Markedly sinuous Mesoproterozoic columns also occur in Siberia and North America, suggesting that similar conditions and processes of stromatolite formation may have been widespread at this time. Formation and preservation of the sinuous stromatolites described here required a combination of conditions that included abundant fine-grained carbonate sediment, microbial mats capable of trapping it, reduced early lithification, and absence of bioturbation.
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