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Microbial mats play a major role
in the formation of exceptionally preserved fossil deposits by overgrowing
and binding organic remains and sedimentary particles. This minimizes hydrodynamic
and biological disruption of dead organisms and sedimentary laminae, but
published works all implicate prokaryotic cyanobacteria as the microbial
agent. However, exceptionally well preserved macrofossils of the Oligocene
Florissant lake beds (Colorado, United States) are enveloped in matted
aggregations of mucous-secreting, pennate diatom frustules. It is suggested
that the macrobiota became entrapped in mucous-secreting mats of surface
water blooms of planktonic diatoms in lake Florissant. As the mats and
the incorporated macrobiota were sedimented out of the water column, the
mucosic mats and their associated bacterial communities arrested decay
and promoted preservation of refractory tissues. Thus, by a completely
different mechanism, the diatom mats fulfilled the same preservational
role previously suggested for cyanobacterial mats. This hitherto unrecognized
mode of preservation may be an important causative factor in the formation
of exceptionally preserved lacustrine fossil biotas. |