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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Terra nova 3 (1991), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-3121
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Current pollution of the total environment is caused by waste products of the extrasomatic metabolism of Homo sapiens who, since the beginnings of the industrial revolution, has raised his energy consumption by a factor of 10–20 above the basic metabolic rate of the single individual. While the increased energy flow through the human ecosystem has brought about an improvement of the human condition unprecedented in the history of mankind (including a doubling of the average life expectancy), it is beset also with an intrinsic maladaptive potential for the possible emergence of an autotoxic effect. The future of high-energy (industrial) societies will, accordingly depend on man's capability to maintain an adequate energy flow while hopefully minimizing the potential impact of autotoxicity on his environment by suitable technological fixes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naturwissenschaften 52 (1965), S. 11-11 
    ISSN: 1432-1904
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Natural Sciences in General
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naturwissenschaften 56 (1969), S. 488-493 
    ISSN: 1432-1904
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Natural Sciences in General
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of earth sciences 62 (1973), S. 840-863 
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Description / Table of Contents: Abstract The economically important sulfide deposits of Precambrian age can be subdivided into two principal groups. The first group is represented by Ni- and Cu-bearing differentiates within either layered intrusions of the Sudbury-Bushveld type or within smaller ultramafic bodies (sometimes of greenstone belt association). The relatively narrow spread around the meteorite standard of the δ34S values of these deposits suggests a mantle provenance of the sulfide sulfur. The second group (which is quantitatively more important) is represented by stratiform concentrations of base metal sulfides in sedimentary sequences lacking normally any ties to potentially ore-bearing magmas (Copper Belt, Broken Hill, Mount Isa, etc.). Although the problems related to the origin of such strata-bound deposits are rather complex, the majority of the latter probably formed as syngenetic sulfide precipitates in reducing aqueous environments characterized by the presence of bacteriogenic H2S. Sulfur isotope data furnished by some of the principal deposits actually suggest that hydrogen sulfide produced by bacterial sulfate reduction was instrumental in bringing about a precipitation of the metal sulfides, thus underlining the decisive role played by the biosphere in processes of supergene metal concentration.
    Abstract: Résumé Les concentrations de sulfures métalliques économiquement importantes dans les terrains précambriens peuvent essentiellement être subdivisées en deux groupes de gisements. Le premier groupe comprend les différenciats de sulfures nickelifères et cuprifères dans les intrusions litées du type Sudbury-Bushveld ou dans l'intérieur de complexes ultrabasiques plus petits. La faible distribution des valeurs du soufre δ34 des météorites standard suggère une provenance abyssale des matériaux sulfurés de ces gisements (pyrrhotine, pentlandite, sulfures de Cu, etc.). Le deuxième groupe quantitativement plus important comprend les enrichissements «stratiformes »de sulfures métalliques dans les sédiments qui, en règle générale, ne montrent aucune liaison avec des magmatites potentiellement minéralisantes (Copper Belt, Broken Hill, Mount Isa, etc.). Quoique les problèmes importants relatifs à ces gisements sulfurés stratiformes rendent difficile une interprétation génétique (et en particulier la dispersion souvent énorme des isotopes du soufre qui permet de conclure à une provenance polygène des sulfures), il doit s'agir dans la plupart des cas de précipitations de métaux synsédimentaires primaires dans un milieu réducteur contenant H2S; à la suite de quoi une mobilisation ultérieure tectonico-métamorphique pourrait avoir exercé une nouvelle concentration de la matière du gisement. La forte participation d'H2S bactériogène au cours de la précipitation des sulfures est confirmée par la distribution des isotopes du soufre dans différents de ces gisements. Ce fait souligne simultanément le rôle décisif de la biosphère au cours de la formation des enrichissements métalliques dans le cycle exogène.
    Notes: Zusammenfassung Die wirtschaftlich wichtigen sulfidischen Metallkonzentrationen in präkambrischen Gesteinen lassen sich im wesentlichen zwei Lagerstättengruppen zuordnen. Die erste Gruppe bilden Ni- und Cu-führende sulfidische Differentiate in geschichteten Intrusionen vom Typ Sudbury-Bushveld oder innerhalb kleinerer ultrabasischer Komplexe. Die nur geringe Streubreite der δ34S-Werte um den Meteoriten-Standard legt eine abyssische Herkunft des sulfidischen Materials (Magnetkies, Pentlandit, Kupferkies u. a.) derartiger Lagerstätten nahe. Die zweite und quantitativ wichtigere Gruppe bilden „schichtige” Anreicherungen von Buntmetallsulfiden in Sedimenten, die in der Regel keinerlei Beziehungen zu potentiell erzbringenden Magmatiten erkennen lassen (Copper Belt, Broken Hill, Mount Isa u. a.). Obwohl die beträchtlichen Probleme dieser stratiformen Sulfidlagerstätten eine genetische Deutung schwierig machen (und insbesondere die oft enorme Streubreite der Schwefelisotopen auf eine polygene Herkunft der Sulfide schließen läßt), dürfte es sich bei der Mehrzahl der Vorkommen um primär synsedimentäre Metallausfällungen in einem H2S-führenden reduzierenden Milieu handeln, wobei spätere tektonischmetamorphe Stoffmobilisierungen möglicherweise eine weitere Konzentration der Lagerstättensubstanz bewirkt haben. Die starke Beteiligung von bakteriogenem Schwefelwasserstoff bei der Ausfällung der Sulfide wird durch die Schwefelisotopen-Verteilung in verschiedenen derartigen Lagerstätten gestützt. Dieser Befund unterstreicht gleichzeitig die entscheidende Rolle der Biosphäre bei der Bildung von Metallanreicherungen im exogenen Zyklus.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of earth sciences 60 (1971), S. 1351-1384 
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Description / Table of Contents: Abstract Because of the oxygen deficiency within the material of the earth's crust and mantle, degassing of the lithosphere does not furnish free oxygen, but gases possessing a strongly reducing character. Therefore, other than geological sources must have provided the free oxygen forming a major constituent of the present atmosphere. It is reasonable to conclude that this oxygen has been liberated from gaseous oxides such as water vapour and carbon dioxide. Since a large-scale dissociation of these compounds can only be brought about by solar radiation, photochemical activity must be responsible for the presence of molecular oxygen in the earth's atmosphere. In this context, we have to distinguish between 1. an inorganic photochemical process working with the energy-rich short wave-lengths of the solar spectrum (2 between 1500 and 2100 Å) and 2. an organic or biologic photochemical process which utilizes the spectral range of the visible light. In addition, the biologic process requires a porphyrin body (chlorophyll) to be present as a catalyst. The oxygen-producing capacity of the inorganic process, i. e., photodissociation of water vapour, is considerably smaller (about 10−3) than that of the organic process (photosynthesis of carbohydrates from CO2 and H2O, releasing oxygen as a metabolic by-product). Accordingly, the bulk of the oxygen now present in the atmosphere may safely be regarded as being biologic in origin. Thus, the geochemical evolution of the atmosphere and the evolution of life are closely related and interdependent. The rise of the oxygen pressure of the ancient atmosphere to about 10−2 P.A.L. (Present Atmospheric Level) enabled life to pass thePasteur point and change from fermentative (anaerobic) to respiratory (aerobic) metabolism. There is reason to believe that the appearance of the first metazoan faunas in the Late Precambrian, about 0.7×109 years ago (Nama-Ediacara fauna), was a direct result of the enormous rise in metabolic energies derived from the more efficient aerobic metabolism. Life as a nonequilibrium steady state, being characterized by an entropy far below the level of its surroundings, requires a constant supply with free energy for its maintenance. As may be concluded from the impact of respiration on the diversification of life at the dawn of the Phanerozoic, this diversification was also dependent on an increased supply in free energy. Evolution thus being— just as life itself — an energy-absorbing (endergonic) process, it must be regarded as highly improbable in terms of theBoltzmann theory of thermodynamics. The mechanism of respiration, using oxygen as a final hydrogen acceptor in energyreleasing biologic redox processes (thereby increasing metabolic energies by the factor of fourteen), obviously played the role of the “Maxwellian demon” which caused the process of evolution to go into the direction of more order (or “diversification”) and less entropy.
    Abstract: Résumé Le présent travail donne un aperçu de l'état actuel de nos connaissances concernant l'évolution de l'atmosphère terrestre depuis le Précambrien ancien. La transformation de l'atmosphère primitive réductrice en l'atmosphère actuelle oxydante paraît, pour la plus grande part, être due à des facteurs biologiques. En raison du parallélisme frappant entre l'évolution organique et l'évolution atmosphérique, la Paléontologie revêt une importance particulière pour l'histoire de l'atmosphère terrestre.
    Notes: Zusammenfassung Infolge des Sauerstoff-Unterschusses im Material von Erdmantel und Erdkruste besitzen deren Entgasungsprodukte generell reduzierenden Charakter und kommen somit als Lieferant von freiem Sauerstoff nicht in Frage. Die Quelle für den Luftsauerstoff muß deshalb in nicht-geologischen Prozessen zu suchen sein, bei denen der Sauerstoff nachträglich aus oxidischen Verbindungen (H2O, CO2) freigesetzt wurde. Da als Energiequelle für diese Reaktionen praktisch nur das Sonnenlicht zur Verfügung steht, muß die Anwesenheit von freiem Sauerstoff in der Atmosphäre letztlich auf einem photochemischen Effekt beruhen. Hierbei ist zu unterscheiden zwischen 1. einem anorganischen photochemischen Effekt, der mit dem kurzwelligen (energiereichen) Teil des Sonnenspektrums arbeitet (insbesondereλ 1500–2100 Å) und 2. einem organischen photochemischen Effekt, der mit dem Spektralbereich des sichtbaren Lichtes arbeitet, aber auf die Mitwirkung eines Katalysators (Chlorophyll) angewiesen ist. Der Anteil des ersteren Prozesses (Photodissoziation von Wasserdampf) am Aufbau der sauerstoffreichen Atmosphäre dürfte bei weitem geringer gewesen sein als der des zweiten (biologische Photosynthese von Kohlehydraten aus CO2 und H2O unter Freisetzung von Sauerstoff als Stoffwechselprodukt), so daß der heutige Luftsauerstoff im wesentlichen als biogen gedeutet werden kann. Die geochemische Evolution der Atmosphäre und die Evolution des Lebens sind somit auf das engste miteinander verknüpft. Mit dem Übergang von der primär reduzierenden zur oxidierenden Atmosphäre konnte beim Überschreiten des sog. „Pasteur-Punktes“ (O2-Partialdruck ∼ 10−2 des heutigen Wertes) der Umschlag vom fermentativen zum oxidativen Energiestoffwechsel erfolgen. Es kann mit guten Gründen angenommen werden, daß die explosive Differenzierung des Lebens an der Wende Präkambrium-Kambrium eine Folge des höheren Energiegewinns bei der Atmung war. Sowohl die Aufrechterhaltung des Lebens als thermodynamisch metastabiler Zustand (mit einer Entropie weit unterhalb des Maximums) als auch seine Differenzierung im Laufe der Evolution bedürfen der ständigen Zufuhr von Energie, sind also nach der bekanntenBoltzmannschen Beziehung im Grunde genommen äußerst unwahrscheinliche Vorgänge. Freier Sauerstoff, der eine vollständige Verbrennung der Kohlehydrate zu Kohlendioxid und Wasser ermöglichte (und damit den Wirkungsgrad des Energiestoffwechsels im Vergleich zur anaeroben Gärung auf etwa das Vierzehnfache erhöhte), spielte bei der Evolution der Metazoen offensichtlich die Rolle „Maxwellschen Dämons“, der für die Aufrechterhaltung des thermodynamischen Ungleichgewichts (bzw. der Negentropie) in größeren Zellverbänden verantwortlich war.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of earth sciences 57 (1968), S. 557-585 
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Description / Table of Contents: Abstract The Orange Free State goldfield represents the southernmost part of the Witwatersrand Basin (Fig. 1) which is completely buried under a cover of Ventersdorp and Karroo rocks. The pre-Karroo geology of this area is characterized by a major rift system trending SSW-NNE (‚'Odendaalsrus graben“), followed to the east by a V-shaped horst and two minor rift blocks (Fig. 2). The main graben is bounded by two principal faults (Border Fault, De Bron Fault, Fig. 4) which are roughly parallel to the western rim of the basin. A tectonic analysis of the basin-edge structures in the northern part of the graben reveals that the basin rim has been subjected to a sequence of deformational acts working over a considerable period of time. A primary compression of the basin-edge region in Upper Witwatersrand times resulted in the formation of a marginal fold; since sedimentation continued, the different stages of the folding process were sometimes preserved by a set of minor unconformities within the youngest sediments (Elsburg A Reefs, Fig. 5). With increasing lateral pressure a couple of reverse faults developed to support the folding (faults No. 10 and 11, Figs. 6 and 7); the minor thrust faults No. 19 and 21 represent the second component of this fault system. A reconstruction of the original depositional plain of the Lower Agglomerate shows that the main thrust faults (No. 10 and 11) are definitely older than the Elsburg A 1 Reef and have been obviously revived after the younger sediments had been laid down (Fig. 8 a). In a later stage compression gave way to tensional forces bringing about a fracturing of the overturned limb of the marginal fold along normal faults (faults No. 4 and 7, Figs. 6 and 7). There is reason to believe that the tensional phase was associated with the incipient rifting during early Ventersdorp times and that these faults were more or less contemporaneous with the general tilting of the basin-edge as displayed to-day (cf. Figs. 3 and 4). Because of the westerly tilt the Boulder Beds dip towards the west, although they must have been originally deposited on a ± horizontal or slightly basinward dipping plain. Faulting was mostly accomplished before deposition of the Ventersdorp sediments and the Upper Ventersdorp Lavas took place; the latter are seldom or only to a small degree affected by the fractures (Figs. 3 and 4). — The age of the tectonics is about 2,1×109 years, i. e. early Precambrian and not Algonkian as formerly supposed. Experimental work aiming at an imitation of the observed basin-edge structures has shown that the principal tectonic features can be produced artificially (Figs. 8 a and b). This refers in particular to the main system of thrust-faults as well as to the younger step-faults caused by tension.
    Abstract: Résumé Les structures tectoniques au bord du Bassin de Witwatersrand dans le district de mines d'or septentrional de la République d'Orange (Afrique du Sud) ont été analysées. Il s'est montré qu'elles sont déterminées par l'action de plusieurs phases de déformation successives de caractères différents. Une phase de compression d'âge Witwatersrand supérieur a d'abord amené un redressement des couches dans une zone marginale du bassin, avec chevauchements à vergences «normales» et inverses. Elle était suivie pendant le Ventersdorp inférieur d'une phase de traction qui produisit des cassures en gradins dans le secteur primitivement comprimé. La traction est très vraisemblablement en relation avec l'effondrement de la zone marginale du bassin pendant ou peu après l'extrusion des laves inférieures de Ventersdorp. Une bande étroite de sédiments, parallèle au bord du bassin, fut alors affectée d'un affaissement (formation du «graben d'Odendaalsrus») où de nombreuses cassures à l'intérieur des compartiments affaissés ont résulté dans la formation de blocs plus ou moins inclinés. Puisque cette zone a d'abord passé par un stade synclinal, on a l'impression que l'effondrement du graben ne représente que la reprise de l'affaissement général du bassin à l'aide d'une «technique nouvelle». - Les mouvements ont un âge de 2.1 milliards d'années, ils datent par conséquent du Précambrien inférieur et ne sont point «intra-algonkiques» comme il fut encore admis tout récemment. Il a été possible de reproduire artificiellement les systèmes de failles les plus importants de la zone marginale du bassin, si les conditions de l'expériment étaient favorables.
    Notes: Zusammenfassung Eine Analyse der Randstrukturen des Witwatersrand-Beckens im nördlichen Oranje-Freistaat-Goldfeld zeigt, daß das tektonische Bild der Beckenrandregion nacheinander durch verschiedene Deformationsakte von unterschiedlichem Charakter geprägt worden ist. Auf eine Einengungsphase von spät-Witwatersrand-Alter, die zur Bildung einer randlichen Aufrichtungszone und zum Aufreißen eines Systems von ‚'normalen“ und antivergenten Aufschiebungen führte, folgte während des Unteren Ventersdorp eine jüngere Zerrungsphase, bei der es zu einem staffeiförmlgen Zerbrechen der ursprünglich eingeengten Scholle kam. Die Zerrung hängt sehr wahrscheinlich mit dem Zerbrechen der Beckenrandregion während oder unmittelbar nach der Extrusion der Unteren Ventersdorp-Laven zusammen. Dabei wurde ein schmaler randparalleler Streifen der Beckenfüllung in einem Graben versenkt (‚'Odendaalsrus-Graben“). Die abgesunkenen Schollenteile sind in sich noch stark zerbrochen und gewöhnlich schiefgestellt. Da der versenkte Streifen durch ein primäres Einmuldungsstadium hindurchgegangen ist, deutet die Grabenbildung offenbar eine Fortsetzung der Beckenbildungsvorgänge ‚'mit anderen Mitteln“ an. — Die Bewegungen haben ein Alter von etwa 2,1 Mrd. Jahren; sie fallen somit ins frühe Präkambrium und sind keinesfalls ‚'intraalgonkisch“, wie es noch bis in die jüngste Vergangenheit angenommen wurde. Tektonische Experimente haben ergeben, daß sich die wichtigsten Störungssysteme der realen Beckenrandstrukturen bei entsprechend gewählter Versuchsanordnung auch künstlich erzeugen lassen.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Origins of life and evolution of the biospheres 15 (1985), S. 263-277 
    ISSN: 1573-0875
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The isotopic composition of organic carbon from extant stromatolite-type microbial ecosystems is commonly slanted toward heavy δ13 C values as compared to respective compositions of average organic matter (including that from Precambrian stromatolites). This seems the more enigmatic as the bulk of primary producers from benthic microbial communities are known to fix carbon via the C3 pathway normally entailing the sizable fractionations of the RuBP carboxylase reaction. There is reason to believe that the small fractionations displayed by aquatic microorganisms result from the limitations of a diffusion-controlled assimilatory pathway in which the isotope effect of the enzymatic reaction is largely suppressed. Apart from the diffusion-control exercised by the aqueous environment, transport of CO2 to the photosynthetically active sites will be further impeded by the protective slime (polysaccharide) coatings commonly covering microbial mats in which gas diffusivities are extremely low. Ineffective discrimination against13C becomes, however, most pronounced in hypersaline environments where substantially reduced CO2 solubilities tend to push carbon into the role of a limiting nutrient (brine habitats constitute preferential sanctuaries of mat-forming microbenthos since the emergence of Metazoan grazers ∼ 0.7 Ga ago). As the same microbial communities had been free to colonize normal marine environments during the Precambrian, the CO2 concentration effect was irrelevant to the carbon-fixing pathway of these ancient forms. Therefore, it might not surprise that organic matter from Precambrian stromatolites displays the large fractionations commonly associated with C3 photosynthesis. Increased mixing ratios of CO2 in the Precambrian atmosphere may have additionally contributed to the elimination of the diffusion barrier in the carbon-fixing pathways of ancient mat-forming microbiota.
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Origins of life and evolution of the biospheres 9 (1979), S. 299-311 
    ISSN: 1573-0875
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The presently available sedimentary sulfur isotope record for the Precambrian seems to allow the following conclusions: (1) In the Early Archaean, sedimentary δ3 4 patterns attributable to bacteriogenic sulfate reduction are generally absent. In particular, the δ3 4 spread observed in the Isua banded iron formation (3.7×109 yr) is extremely narrow and coincides completely with the respective spreads yielded by contemporaneous rocks of assumed mantle derivation. Incipient minor differentiation of the isotope patterns notably of Archaean sulfates may be accounted for by photosynthetic sulfur bacteria rather than by sulfate reducers. (2) Isotopic evidence of dissimilatory sulfate reduction is first observed in the upper Archaean of the Aldan Shield, Siberia (∼3.0×109 yr) and in the Michipicoten and Woman River banded iron formations of Canada (2.75×109 yr). This narrows down the possible time of appearance of sulfate respirers to the interval 2.8–3.1×109 yr. (3) Various lines of evidence indicate that photosynthesis is older than sulfate respiration, the SO 4 2− utilized by the first sulfate reducers deriving most probably from oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds by photosynthetic sulfur bacteria. Sulfate respiration must, in turn, have antedated oxygen respiration as O2-respiring multicellular eucaryotes appear late in the Precambrian. (4) With the bulk of sulfate in the Archaean oceans probably produced by photosynthetic sulfur bacteria, the accumulation of SO 4 2− in the ancient seas must have preceded the buildup of appreciable steady state levels of free oxygen. Hence, the occurrence of sulfate evaporites in Archaean sediments does not necessarily provide testimony of oxidation weathering on the ancient continents and, consequently, of the existence of an atmospheric oxygen reservoir.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 333 (1988), S. 313-318 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] An increased ratio of 12C to 13C, an indicator of the principal carbon-fixing reaction of photosynthesis, is found in sedimentary organic matter dating back to almost four thousand million years ago—a sign of prolific microbial life not long after the Earth's ...
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 327 (1987), S. 699-702 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The Krol-Tal sedimentary succession forms large synclinal structures along the southern margin of the Himalayan belt (Fig. la), reaching a maximum thickness of about 3,000m. The chronostratigraphy of this largely non-fossiliferous series (Fig. Ib) has long been a subject of controversy among ...
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