Abstract

AbstractThe silicon (Si) cycle in the modern ocean might still be representative of some of the processes that occurred in the Si‐depleted post‐Eocene oceans resulting after the expansion of diatoms. However, silicon‐rich pre‐Eocene seas, where sponges and radiolarians were major Si users before the emergence of diatoms, were radically different from modern ocean scenarios. The spatial and temporal evolution of Si cycling in Earth history is recorded in geological deposits and could be reconstructed by petrographic and mineralogical analyses. The thick successions of carbonate siliceous rocks deposited in marine environments during the Paleozoic and Mesozoic indicate the significant role of Si outflow from the Si cycle via burial in sediments. The aim of this study is to fill an important gap in knowledge concerning the functioning of the main silicon sink in the oceans: burial in sediments. Si outflow from the marine biogeochemical Si cycle occurs via early diagenetic silica crystallization within seabed mud. The mechanisms leading to Si binding in silica minerals are a complex process controlled by abiotic global events, biological activity of silicifiers and geochemical conditions mediated by microbes. This study concentrates on reconstructions of the mechanisms of Si outflow from the Si cycle by silica polymorph crystallization below the seabed surface and was realized through mineralogical and microtextural analyses of the main components of Upper Cretaceous carbonate–siliceous rocks.

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