Drawing on a combination of modern occurrences and likely ancient counterparts, this atlas is a treatise of mat-related sedimentary features that one may expect to see in ancient terrigenous clastic sedimentary successions. By combining modern and ancient examples, the connection is made to likely formative processes and the utilization of these features in the interpretation of ancient sedimentary rocks.
Drawing on a combination of modern occurrences and likely ancient counterparts, this atlas is a treatise of mat-related sedimentary features that one may expect to see in ancient terrigenous clastic sedimentary successions. By combining modern and ancient examples, the connection is made to likely formative processes and the utilization of these features in the interpretation of ancient sedimentary rocks.
Professor Wladyslaw Altermann is a regional geologist with expertise in Precambrian sedimentary systems, carbonate rocks, early life evolution, and more recently, CO? sequestration in South Africa. Originally from Poland, he earned his MSc and PhD (Dr. rer. nat.) at the Free University of Berlin (West), focusing on Permo-Carboniferous rocks of Thailand and Malaysia. He also worked for the German Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR) in Hannover and in Peru.
In 1988, Prof. Altermann moved to South Africa, which became his third home. After a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Stellenbosch, he returned to Germany to join LMU Munich, where he completed his second doctorate (Dr. habil.) in 1998, studying Archean carbonates, stromatolites, BIFs, and the western Kaapvaal Craton's structural geology.
Prof. Altermann held postdoctoral positions at UCLA (USA), CBM-CNRS Orléans (France), and the University of Western Australia (Perth). Helater became Associate Professor at LMU Munich, where he served as interim chair for several professorial positions and served as Honorary Professor at Shandong University of Technology (China) from 2003 to 2005. In 2009, he returned permanently to South Africa, joining the University of Pretoria as the Kumba-Exxaro Chair in Geodynamics of Mineral Deposits (mining industry supported Chair) and later becoming Head of the Department of Geology.
Throughout his career, Prof. Altermann has been deeply involved in the scientific community, serving on national committees and editorial boards for international journals and as editor of books and special volumes. He was a Vice-President of the Geological Society of Africa and Chairman of the South African Committee for Stratigraphy. He retired from UP in 2019 and has since been working as a freelance geological consultant in Pretoria.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Prologue: an introduction to microbial mats 2. Structures left by modern microbial mats in their host sediments 3. Classification of structures left by microbial mats in their host sediments 4. Mat features in sandstones 5. Microbial mats on muddy substrates - examples of possible sedimentary features and underlying processes 6. Discussion of some problems: unusual features and the importance of terminology 7. Examples of stratigraphic units bearing outstanding mat features 8. New developments in research on microbial mats 9. Palaeoenvironmental and chronological relationships of mat-related features, and sequence stratigraphic implications of microbial mats 10. Conclusions
1. Prologue: an introduction to microbial mats 2. Structures left by modern microbial mats in their host sediments 3. Classification of structures left by microbial mats in their host sediments 4. Mat features in sandstones 5. Microbial mats on muddy substrates - examples of possible sedimentary features and underlying processes 6. Discussion of some problems: unusual features and the importance of terminology 7. Examples of stratigraphic units bearing outstanding mat features 8. New developments in research on microbial mats 9. Palaeoenvironmental and chronological relationships of mat-related features, and sequence stratigraphic implications of microbial mats 10. Conclusions
Rezensionen
"The results summarized in this book have already helped to open up an exciting avenue in the study of microbial evolution, and the atlas itself will undoubtedly serve as an invaluable aid to researchers in the field." --Mike Tice, Texas A & M University, writing in the Journal of Sedimentary Research
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