Large native (i.e., elemental) sulfur deposits can be part of caprock assemblages found on top of or in lateral position to salt diapirs and as stratabound mineralization in gypsum and anhydrite lithologies. Native sulfur is formed when hydrocarbons come in contact with sulfate minerals in presence of liquid water. The prevailing model for native sulfur formation in such settings is that sulfide produced by sulfate-reducing bacteria is oxidized to zero-valent sulfur in presence of molecular oxygen (O). Although possible, such a scenario is problematic because: (1) exposure to oxygen would drastically decrease growth of microbial sulfate-reducing organisms, thereby slowing down sulfide production; (2) on geologic timescales, excess supply with oxygen would convert sulfide into sulfate rather than native sulfur; and (3) to produce large native sulfur deposits, enormous amounts of oxygenated water would need to be brought in close proximity to environments in which ample hydrocarbon supply sustains sulfate reduction. However, sulfur stable isotope data from native sulfur deposits emplaced at a stage after the formation of the host rocks indicate that the sulfur was formed in a setting with little solute exchange with the ambient environment and little supply of dissolved oxygen. We deduce that there must be a process for the formation of native sulfur in absence of an external oxidant for sulfide. We hypothesize that in systems with little solute exchange, sulfate-reducing organisms, possibly in cooperation with other anaerobic microbial partners, drive the formation of native sulfur deposits. In order to cope with sulfide stress, microbes may shift from harmful sulfide production to non-hazardous native sulfur production. We propose four possible mechanisms as a means to form native sulfur: (1) a modified sulfate reduction process that produces sulfur compounds with an intermediate oxidation state, (2) coupling of sulfide oxidation to methanogenesis that utilizes methylated compounds, acetate or carbon dioxide, (3) ammonium oxidation coupled to sulfate reduction, and (4) sulfur comproportionation of sulfate and sulfide. We show these reactions are thermodynamically favorable and especially useful in environments with multiple stressors, such as salt and dissolved sulfide, and provide evidence that microbial species functioning in such environments produce native sulfur. Integrating these insights, we argue that microbes may form large native sulfur deposits in absence of light and external oxidants such as O, nitrate, and metal oxides. The existence of such a process would not only explain enigmatic occurrences of native sulfur in the geologic record, but also provide an explanation for cryptic sulfur and carbon cycling beneath the seabed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.00024 | DOI Listing |
Geobiology
March 2025
Fachbereich Erdsystemwissenschaften, Centrum für Erdsystemforschung und Nachhaltigkeit, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
The microbially mediated replacement of sulfate-bearing evaporites by authigenic carbonate and native sulfur under anoxic conditions is poorly understood. Sulfur-bearing carbonates from the Monte Palco ridge (Sicily) replacing Messinian gypsum were therefore studied to better characterize the involved microorganisms. The lack of (1) sedimentary bedding, (2) lamination, and (3) significant water-column-derived lipid biomarkers in the secondary carbonates implies replacement after gypsum deposition (epigenesis).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
February 2025
Qingdao Key Laboratory of Ecological Protection and Restoration, Ministry of Natural Resources Key Laboratory of Ecological Prewarning, Protection and Restoration of Bohai Sea, School of Life Sciences, Shandong University, Qingdao, China.
Soil microbial communities are integral to almost all terrestrial biogeochemical cycles, which are essential to coastal wetland functioning. However, how soil bacterial community assembly, composition, and structure respond to native and non-native plant invasions in coastal wetlands remains unclear. In this study of the coastal wetlands of the Yellow River Delta in China, the assembly, community composition, and diversity of soil bacterial communities associated with four wetland plant species (, , , and ) and four soil depths (0-10 cm, 10-20 cm, 20-30 cm, and 30-40 cm) were characterized using high-throughput sequencing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
February 2025
Department of Chemistry and the RNA Institute, University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY 12222, USA.
The Group 16 elements of the periodic table have a characteristic valence shell configuration instrumental to their chemical properties and reactivities. The electrostatic potentials of these so-called chalcogens have been exploited in the design of materials that require the efficient passage of electrons including supermagnets, photocatalytic dyes, and solar panels. Likewise, the incorporation of the heavy chalcogen selenium into organic frameworks has been shown to increase the reactivities of double bonds and heterocyclic rings, while its interactions with aromatic side chains in the hydrophobic core of proteins via selenomethionine impart a stabilizing effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Model
February 2025
Department of Chemistry, School of Chemical Sciences, Central University of Karnataka, Kalaburagi, 585367, Karnataka, India.
Context: Sunscreen formulations often contain avobenzone as a UVA filter to combat the deleterious effects of solar UV radiation. Avobenzone has notable drawbacks: (1) photounstability under UV radiation/sunlight and (2) tendency for skin penetration. The current report aims to improve both the intrinsic photostability and decrease the skin permeability of avobenzone through skeleton structure modification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAstrobiology
February 2025
Institute of Geology and Geochemistry of the Ural Branch of the RAS, Ekaterinburg, Russia.
Hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide are widespread substances in epithermal endogenous fluids. When the gas of one of these substances is filtered through the condensate of the other, abiogenic hydrocarbon synthesis can result. The direction of such a synthesis is a result of the absorption of the filtering gas by condensate and the formation of hydrocarbons and native sulfur in the condensate.
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