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Mobile mud layer underneath the desiccated maar lake of Rincón de Parangueo and insights into its microbial fingerprints
Author(s) -
Janet SánchezSánchez,
Mariano Cerca,
Rocı́o Alcántara-Hernández,
José Jorge Aranda-Gómez,
Dora CarreónFreyre,
Carlos LozanoFlores,
Israel MuñozVelasco,
Gilles Levresse,
Alfredo VarelaEchavarría
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
revista mexicana de ciencias geológicas/revista mexicana de ciencias geológicas (en línea)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1026-8774
pISSN - 2007-2902
DOI - 10.22201/cgeo.20072902e.2021.3.1636
Subject(s) - geology , sedimentary rock , mud volcano , groundwater , geochemistry , geomorphology , geotechnical engineering
We surveyed a subsurface layer of saturated mobile mud and its microbial fingerprints below the desiccated bottom of a maar lake at Rincón de Parangueo (RP), Mexico. A multi-scale approach was followed using geological fieldwork, coring of the sediments, ground penetrating radar survey, physico-chemical characterization including X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscope, and high-throughput DNA sequencing methods. The mobile mud is an organic-rich silty clay, with high values of alkalinity, volumetric water content and conductivity. Mud mobility has been attributed to overpressure caused by disequilibrium compaction of sediments related to active subsidence and pore overpressure produced by an input of groundwater and gas content in the sediments and resulted in a diverse set of structures related to mud tectonics such as injection domes and fluid seeps through fractures. Extraction and sequencing of sedimentary environmental DNA in the mud layer were performed for Bacteria and Archaea. Despite the small number of samples obtained, the microbial fingerprint from the sedimentary environmental DNA at subsurface shares similarities with the microbial communities identified on the crater surface. Additionally, we identify the DNA of specific methanogenic microorganisms in the mud, such as Bathyarchaeia, Methanomassiliicoccales, and Methanobacteriales, and we speculate on their probable role in gas production and pore overpressure in the mud layer. The underground mud at Rincón de Parangueo represents a geologically dynamic environment with conditions that are favorable for the thriving of microbial communities.

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