Martine Gérard
Institut de recherche pour le développement
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Featured researches published by Martine Gérard.
Chemical Geology | 2003
Marc F. Benedetti; Aline Dia; Jean Riotte; François Chabaux; Martine Gérard; Jacques Boulègue; Bertrand Fritz; Catherine Chauvel; Marc Bulourde; Bernard Déruelle; Philippe Ildefonse
This study was dedicated to the early stage of the weathering of historic basaltic flows located in Mount Cameroon. The combination of high relief (i.e. 0 to 4071 m) and high rainfall range (i.e. 1.8 to 12 m/year) lead to strong climatic contrast. Spring and rivers were sampled all around the volcano. We report here the basic chemistry of the waters as well as strontium and uranium isotopic ratios. The combination of the molar proportions of solute obtained with the modal amounts of the minerals in the basalts gives a prediction of what should be the relative molar concentrations of major compounds in the weathering waters issuing from Mount Cameroon. The measured Alkalinity/Si and Mg/Si ratios are higher than the calculated ones while the measured Ca/Si ratio is equal to the calculated value. We suggest that the Si-poor waters of Mount Cameroon are due to biological pumping, trapping of Si in Fe-silicate minerals such as Si containing ferrihydrite and Si interaction with bacterial cell wall leading to the formation of allophane type minerals which were observed in Mount Cameroon soil profiles. Calcium uptake by plants explains the lower Ca/alkalinity ratios measured in the water samples. The water–rock ratio (R) calculated from the strontium isotopic compositions of the water samples, ranges from 29,452 to 367,450. The calculated weathering rates (WR) range from 1 to 20 mm/ky and from 1 to 103 mm/ky for high and low elevations, respectively, and agree with both the thickness and the age of paleosoils found in the same area and with previously published estimates from coupled reaction-transport models. This difference emphasizes the role of vegetation and rainfall at lower elevations as compared to what happens at high elevations.
Archive | 1995
Patrick Maillet; Etienne Ruellan; Martine Gérard; Alain Person; Herve Bellon; Joseph Cotten; Jean-Louis Joron; Setsuya Nakada; Richard C. Price
In the southwest Pacific, a discontinuous series of narrow and elongated troughs separates the New Hebrides island arc from the adjacent active marginal basin, the North Fiji Basin. This chapter reviews the structural, geophysical, geochronological, and petrological data available for the New Hebrides backarc troughs (NHBAT) and discusses the significance of these structures. A diffuse horst-and-graben morphology, partly obscured in some places by recent volcanic complexes, characterizes the northern Jean-Charcot troughs (JCT). By contrast, the southern Coriolis troughs (CT) show well-developed flat-bottomed grabens. Moreover, no backarc troughs are observed in the central backarc area, adjacent where the d’Entrecasteaux zone collides with the arc. Volcanic rocks dredged in the NHBAT show a wide range of SiO, contents, with highAlzo3 and low-Tio, contents, features typical of their archackarc environments. Trace element analyses indicate a much stronger subduction component in the volcanics of the southern CT than in those of the northern JCT. However, large-ionic-radius-lithophileelement (LILE) (Ba, Rb, Sr) enrichments and high-field-strength-elements (HFSE) (Ta, Nb, Zr, Ti,-Y, Yb) depletions, relative to N-MORB (mid-ocean ridge basalts), are generally observed in most NHBAT volcanics and are features characteristic of island-arc basic and
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015
Anne Postec; Marianne Quéméneur; Méline Bes; Nan Mei; Fatma Benaïssa; Claude Payri; Bernard Pelletier; Christophe Monnin; Linda Guentas-Dombrowsky; Bernard Ollivier; Emmanuelle Gérard; Céline Pisapia; Martine Gérard; Bénédicte Ménez; Gaël Erauso
Active carbonate chimneys from the shallow marine serpentinizing Prony Hydrothermal Field were sampled 3 times over a 6 years period at site ST09. Archaeal and bacterial communities composition was investigated using PCR-based methods (clone libraries, Denaturating Gel Gradient Electrophoresis, quantitative PCR) targeting 16S rRNA genes, methyl coenzyme M reductase A and dissimilatory sulfite reductase subunit B genes. Methanosarcinales (Euryarchaeota) and Thaumarchaea were the main archaeal members. The Methanosarcinales, also observed by epifluorescent microscopy and FISH, consisted of two phylotypes that were previously solely detected in two other serpentinitzing ecosystems (The Cedars and Lost City Hydrothermal Field). Surprisingly, members of the hyperthermophilic order Thermococcales were also found which may indicate the presence of a hot subsurface biosphere. The bacterial community mainly consisted of Firmicutes, Chloroflexi, Alpha-, Gamma-, Beta-, and Delta-proteobacteria and of the candidate division NPL-UPA2. Members of these taxa were consistently found each year and may therefore represent a stable core of the indigenous bacterial community of the PHF chimneys. Firmicutes isolates representing new bacterial taxa were obtained by cultivation under anaerobic conditions. Our study revealed diverse microbial communities in PHF ST09 related to methane and sulfur compounds that share common populations with other terrestrial or submarine serpentinizing ecosystems.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017
Céline Pisapia; Emmanuelle Gérard; Martine Gérard; Léna Lecourt; Susan Q. Lang; Bernard Pelletier; Claude Payri; Christophe Monnin; Linda Guentas; Anne Postec; Marianne Quéméneur; Gaël Erauso; Bénédicte Ménez
Despite their potential importance as analogs of primitive microbial metabolisms, the knowledge of the structure and functioning of the deep ecosystems associated with serpentinizing environments is hampered by the lack of accessibility to relevant systems. These hyperalkaline environments are depleted in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), making the carbon sources and assimilation pathways in the associated ecosystems highly enigmatic. The Prony Bay Hydrothermal Field (PHF) is an active serpentinization site where, similar to Lost City (Mid-Atlantic Ridge), high-pH fluids rich in H2 and CH4 are discharged from carbonate chimneys at the seafloor, but in a shallower lagoonal environment. This study aimed to characterize the subsurface microbial ecology of this environment by focusing on the earliest stages of chimney construction, dominated by the discharge of hydrothermal fluids of subseafloor origin. By jointly examining the mineralogy and the microbial diversity of the conduits of juvenile edifices at the micrometric scale, we find a central role of uncultivated bacteria belonging to the Firmicutes in the ecology of the PHF. These bacteria, along with members of the phyla Acetothermia and Omnitrophica, are identified as the first chimneys inhabitants before archaeal Methanosarcinales. They are involved in the construction and early consolidation of the carbonate structures via organomineralization processes. Their predominance in the most juvenile and nascent hydrothermal chimneys, and their affiliation with environmental subsurface microorganisms, indicate that they are likely discharged with hydrothermal fluids from the subseafloor. They may thus be representative of endolithic serpentinization-based ecosystems, in an environment where DIC is limited. In contrast, heterotrophic and fermentative microorganisms may consume organic compounds from the abiotic by-products of serpentinization processes and/or from life in the deeper subsurface. We thus propose that the Firmicutes identified at PHF may have a versatile metabolism with the capability to use diverse organic compounds from biological or abiotic origin. From that perspective, this study sheds new light on the structure of deep microbial communities living at the energetic edge in serpentinites and may provide an alternative model of the earliest metabolisms.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009
Anne-Lise Chenet; Vincent Courtillot; Frederic Fluteau; Martine Gérard; Xavier Quidelleur; S. Khadri; K. V. Subbarao; T. Thordarson
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008
Anne-Lise Chenet; Frederic Fluteau; Vincent Courtillot; Martine Gérard; K. V. Subbarao
Chemical Geology | 2003
Jean Riotte; François Chabaux; Marc F. Benedetti; Aline Dia; Martine Gérard; Jacques Boulègue; J. Etamé
Chemical Geology | 2006
Aline Dia; Catherine Chauvel; Marc Bulourde; Martine Gérard
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2005
Catherine Chauvel; Aline Dia; Marc Bulourde; François Chabaux; S. Durand; Philippe Ildefonse; Martine Gérard; B. Deruelle; Ismaïla Ngounouno
Hydrological Processes | 2003
Martine Gérard; Patrick Seyler; Marc F. Benedetti; V.P. Alves; Geraldo Resende Boaventura; Francis Sondag