Abstract

In the Lower Carboniferous limestones and shales of the Benbulben Range, Counties Sligo and Leitrim, northwestern Ireland, a suite of carbonate nodules, about 1 to 4 cm in diameter, has been sampled and investigated by thin sectioning. The nodules consist of micritic, peloidal and fenestral fabrics. Many of them contain relics of desma bearing demosponges and hexactinellid sponge skeletons. The nodules are interpreted as calcified siliceous sponges. Micrite and peloids have been formed via microbial activity during the decay of the soft sponge tissue. The actual processes are deduced from Recent examples investigated at Lizard Island, Autralia, byReitner (1993). The skeletal opal was dissolved very early. In places where the skeleton was already embedded in micrite the spicules are preserved as molds cemented by granular ferroan calcite. The nodules were extensively inhabited by agglutinating polychaetes and bored by sponges. Micrite clasts have been exported to the surrounding seafloor before the sponges were completely covered by sediments. Fenestral fabrics represent primary sponge cavities, that may be enlarged due to volume reduction of the soft tissue during calcification. Some originated from non-calcification of decaying tissue. The granular calcite cement, filling the fenestral fabrics, contains relics of spicules and faintly visible peloids floating unsupportedly in the cement. These peloids were probably produced in situ by calcification of organic mucilages that filled the cavities almost entirely. It is evident that most diagenetic processes occurring within the sponges happened on the seafloor, most likely within the still living individuals. Possibly the nodules represent a precursor stage of mud mound development.

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