Home Comparison of crystallographic orientations between living (Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica) and fossil (Watznaueria barnesiae) coccoliths using electron microscopes
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Comparison of crystallographic orientations between living (Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica) and fossil (Watznaueria barnesiae) coccoliths using electron microscopes

  • Kazuko Saruwatari EMAIL logo , Noriaki Ozaki , Hiromichi Nagasawa and Toshihiro Kogure
Published/Copyright: April 1, 2015
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

Crystallographic orientations of coccoliths produced by the extant species Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica, and of a fossil cocccolith, Watzunaueria barnesiae, all of which are mainly composed of calcite crystals with horizontally oriented c axes (termed R-units), were investigated using two electron diffraction techniques. According to electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) analyses, the c-axis inclinations of all R-units were oriented about 10-30° from the sample substrate, which is approximately parallel to the organic base plate of the coccolith. However, the directions are toward the coccolith exterior in living coccoliths but toward the interior in fossil coccoliths. The crystallographic orientations of calcite crystals characterized by sub-vertically oriented c axes (termed V-units) were determined only for W. barnesiae and were similar to those of V-units in another living cococlith, Pleurochrysis carterae. Highly regulated crystallographic orientation and consistent chirality were evidenced for all the coccoliths with only a few degrees of variations by Kikuchi patterns analyses from TEM. To determine the indices of the crystallographic plane and edge direction that constitute distal and proximal shield elements, SEM stereo-photogrammetry in combination with EBSD analyses was applied. In the living coccoliths both shields contain the c-axis and the surface is estimated to be {21̅1̅0} with [481] the longer peripheral edge. On the other hand, the two shield surfaces of W. barnesiae are evaluated {101̅4} and the distal shield surface is surrounded by clear [481] edges. This indicates that the crystallography and morphology of R-units were not fixed for the past 230 million years. Based on these results, the calcite nucleation mechanisms are discussed with respect to the atomic arrangements on the organic template through all the coccoliths.

Received: 2008-1-6
Accepted: 2008-3-14
Published Online: 2015-4-1
Published in Print: 2008-10-1

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Amorphous materials: Properties, structure, and durability: Atomic structure and transport properties of MgO-Al2O3 melts: A molecular dynamics simulation study
  2. Amorphous Materials: Properties, structure, and durability: Oxidation state of iron in hydrous phono-tephritic melts
  3. Amorphous materials: Properties, structure, and durability: Quantitative Raman spectroscopy: Speciation of Na-silicate glasses and melts
  4. Dissolution-reprecipitation of zircon at low-temperature, high-pressure conditions (Lanzo Massif, Italy)
  5. High-pressure behavior of gypsum: A single-crystal X-ray study
  6. Presence and zoning of hydrous components in leucite from the Alban Hills volcano, Rome, Italy
  7. Herderite from Mogok, Myanmar, and comparison with hydroxyl-herderite from Ehrenfriedersdorf, Germany
  8. Application of Raman spectroscopy to quantify trace water concentrations in glasses and garnets
  9. Neutron diffraction study of δ-AlOOD at high pressure and its implication for symmetrization of the hydrogen bond
  10. A simple predictive model for the thermal expansion of AlSi3 feldspars
  11. New data on PGE alloy minerals from a very old collection (probably 1890s), California
  12. High-pressure study on lead fluorapatite
  13. High-pressure Al-rich hexagonal phases—What are their kin?
  14. Leucite at high pressure: Elastic behavior, phase stability, and petrological implications
  15. Thermodynamic mixing properties of Rb-K feldspars
  16. Demicheleite, BiSBr, a new mineral from La Fossa crater, Vulcano, Aeolian Islands, Italy
  17. A lattice dynamical study of the aragonite and post-aragonite phases of calcium carbonate rock
  18. Water in natural olivine—determined by proton-proton scattering analysis
  19. Factors affecting heat transfer in natural SiO2 solids
  20. A solution model for high-temperature PbS-AgSbS2-AgBiS2 galena
  21. Incorporation of molybdate anion into β-FeOOH
  22. Disordering of Fe2+ over octahedrally coordinated sites of tourmaline
  23. Raman spectroscopy of CaIrO3 postperovskite up to 30 GPa
  24. The thermal behavior of richterite
  25. The crystal structure of kelyanite, (Hg2)6(SbO6)BrCl2
  26. Comparison of crystallographic orientations between living (Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica) and fossil (Watznaueria barnesiae) coccoliths using electron microscopes
  27. Letter. Iron partitioning between perovskite and post-perovskite: A transmission electron microscope study
  28. Letter. An isosymmetric phase transition of orthopyroxene found by high-temperature X-ray diffraction
Downloaded on 22.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.2138/am.2008.2924/html
Scroll to top button