Microbial Mats from the Khor Al-Adaid Sabkha, Qatar: Morphotypes and Association with Authigenic Minerals
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Date
2016Author
Bontognali, Tomaso R.R.Al Disi, Zulfa Ali
Mckenzie, Judith A.
Strohmenger, Christian J.
Rivers, John M.
Dittrich, Maria
Sadooni, Fadhil
Al-Kuwari, Hamad Al Saad
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The sabkhas (i.e., salt flats) of Qatar are among the rare places on Earth where carbonate and sulfate minerals similar to those constituting economically important hydrocarbon reservoirs are still forming today, under the arid conditions that characterize the coastline of the country. Since the 1960's, the sabkhas of Qatar have been studied with great interest as a modern analogue for ancient sedimentary sequences (e.g., Wells, 1962; Illing & Taylor, 1995; Alsharhan & Kendall, 2003). The results of these studies provided important insights for formulating stratigraphic models of subsurface hydrocarbon reservoirs. Notable examples of gas and oil reservoirs that formed in arid, evaporitic environments include the Permo-Triassic Khuff (which is estimated to contain about 15-20% of the world's gas reserves and is of fundamental importance for the economy of Qatar), the Jurassic Arab formations, and the Triassic Kurra Chine, all of the Middle East, and the Permian Zechstein of Northern Europe. Although extremely valuable, most of these early studies were based on purely physical and chemical approaches, which may have not fully captured the complexity of the mineralization processes occurring in the sabkha environment. Indeed, research conducted in more recent years has shown that microorganisms play an important and, as yet, poorly understood role for the mineralization processes occurring in these evaporitic environments (Bontognali et al., 2010; Bontognali et al., 2012; Bontognali et al., 2014; Brauchli et al., 2015; Paulo & Dittrich, 2013; Strohmenger et al., 2011). Here we present the results of a field campaign conducted in the Khor Al-Adaid sabkha, which is located in the southeast of Qatar, in a large tidal embayment composed of two shallow inland lagoons. The main goal of the field campaign was to identify regions of the intertidal zone that are particularly rich in microbial mats, and that represent ideal sites at which to study microbe-mineral interactions. Three sites of interest have been defined.
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http://hdl.handle.net/10576/28927Collections
- Biological & Environmental Sciences [920 items ]