Abstract
Biogenic signatures in Precambrian rocks are often difficult to confirm and debatable. We present some unusual features associated with microbial-mat related structures (MRS) from the freshly-exposed rippled bed surface of 1.6 Ga old Chorhat Sandstone, Vindhyan Supergroup, India. The features discussed here, are present within intertidal to supratidal environments often affected by storms. One of the features includes ridge-groove couplets that run across the ripple crests. Locally, the ridge-groove couplet forms a braid-like pattern. Along the ripple troughs, the ridges are considerably long and maintain a uniform width on the mm scale. Another feature shows meandering grooves bordered by ridges. The grooves swerve, form loops, cut across older grooves, and branch up. None of them have comparable equivalents in the Precambrian record described thus far. The invariably uniform width of the ridges for both the two features cannot be compared with undersurface gas bubble migration, and the swerving and reversing nature of the grooves denies passive movement of any inorganic/organic masses under the influence of an external force. They seem to have been created by movement through a microbiota-rich surficial sediment. Such unusual features raise questions about the biosphere and biotic structures during the Boring Billion (1.8–0.8 Ga).
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