Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Analysis of moonmilk nanofibers in the etruscan tombs of Tarquinia

2021; American Institute of Physics; Volume: 2420; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1063/5.0068804

ISSN

1935-0465

Autores

Francesco Mura, Angela Cirigliano, Daniele F. Maras, Teresa Rinaldi,

Tópico(s)

Geology and Paleoclimatology Research

Resumo

The moonmilk is a secondary calcite deposit (speleothem) formed by nanofibers of calcite and commonly found in karst caves. While its biogenic origin is widely accepted, the mechanism of calcite nanofibers production remains unclear. Crystallization and formation mechanism of calcium carbonate nanostructures are of high interest in different fields, such as geomicrobiology (rock-microbes interactions), astrobiology (biosignatures), medicine (antibiotics producing bacteria), nanotechnology (calcium carbonate nanofibers) and recently, archeology. The discovery of the moonmilk in the hypogeal tombs of the ancient necropolis of Tarquinia (Italy), provides a unique opportunity to compare moonmilk crystal shapes that originated from two type of rocks, Macco (a calcarenite) and Sabbione (a hybrid sandstone). We analyzed, through a SEM analysis, moonmilk samples from twelve tombs in the necropolis area and found that rocks provide an ideal environment for the formation of the nanofibers; the Sabbione promoted the growth of a finer and thinner carbonate nanostructures, probably due to a slower growth kinetics caused by a low calcium value present in this rock.

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