Charles Explorer logo
🇨🇿

The unique preservation of Sepia soft tissues in the Miocene deposits (Serravalian, Vienna Basin): Implications for the origin of microbodies in the fossil record

Publikace na Přírodovědecká fakulta |
2018

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

For the first time, we report an ancient cuttlefish ink sac possessing microbodies from the lower Serravallian (Middle Miocene) deposits of the Vienna Basin (Central Paratethys). We compare the geochemistry of these microbodies with the ink sac of the extant genus Sepia.

The unique preservation of the cuttlefish soft tissue resulted from a high sedimentation rate and a low degree of sediment reworking and bioirrigation, which led to the dominance of anaerobic degradation pathways such as sulfate reduction below a thin oxic surface layer. The Recent Sepia melanin extracted from the ink sac is commonly used as a standard in biochemical analyses.

However, it was unclear whether melanosomes can be preserved in fossil cuttlefishes. Although some portion of melanin-bearing microbodies is affected by pyritization, we show that some microbodies are still composed of eumelanin using Raman spectroscopy.

They consist of particles corresponding to the size and shape of melanosomes observed in extant Sepia according to images produced with a scanning electron microscope. The Raman microspectroscopy of these microbodies in the Miocene Sepia shows identical chemical composition as in the Sepia officinalis ink melanin standard.

Therefore, we confirm that these microbodies represent true fossil melanin pigment and melanosome remnants rather than being produced by microbes.