Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16364
Authors: Venturi, Stefania* 
Crognale, Simona* 
Di Benedetto, Francesco* 
Montegrossi, Giordano* 
Casentini, Barbara* 
Amalfitano, Stefano* 
Baroni, Tommaso* 
Rossetti, Simona* 
Tassi, Franco* 
Capecchiacci, Francesco* 
Vaselli, Orlando* 
Fazi, Stefano* 
Title: Interplay between abiotic and microbial biofilm-mediated processes for travertine formation: Insights from a thermal spring (Piscine Carletti, Viterbo, Italy)
Journal: Geobiology 
Series/Report no.: /20 (2022)
Publisher: Wiley
Issue Date: Nov-2022
DOI: 10.1111/gbi.12516
Keywords: biofilms; gypsum; hot spring; microbial mat; travertine
Abstract: Active hydrothermal travertine systems are ideal environments to investigate how abiotic and biotic processes affect mineralization mechanisms and mineral fabric formation. In this study, a biogeochemical characterization of waters, dissolved gases, and microbial mats was performed together with a mineralogical investigation on travertine encrustations occurring at the outflow channel of a thermal spring. The comprehensive model, compiled by means of TOUGHREACT computational tool from measured parameters, revealed that mineral phases were differently influenced by either abiotic conditions or microbially driven processes. Microbial mats are shaped by light availability and temperature gradient of waters flowing along the channel. Mineralogical features were homogeneous throughout the system, with euhedral calcite crystals, related to inorganic precipitation induced by CO2 degassing, and calcite shrubs associated with organomineralization processes, thus indicating an indirect microbial participation to the mineral deposition (microbially influenced calcite). The microbial activity played a role in driving calcite redissolution processes, resulting in circular pits on calcite crystal surfaces possibly related to the metabolic activity of sulfur-oxidizing bacteria found at a high relative abundance within the biofilm community. Sulfur oxidation might also explain the occurrence of gypsum crystals embedded in microbial mats, since gypsum precipitation could be induced by a local increase in sulfate concentration mediated by S-oxidizing bacteria, regardless of the overall undersaturated environmental conditions. Moreover, the absence of gypsum dissolution suggested the capability of microbial biofilm in modulating the mobility of chemical species by providing a protective envelope on gypsum crystals.
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