Brackish ponds and lagoons located on Polynesian atolls are frequently
colonized by thick cyanobacterial mats. The accumulated organic mater
ial (OM) is preserved due to prevailing anoxia. The high productivity
of these microbial mats is controlled by high nutrient contents in the
interstitial waters of the underlying limestone, in accordance with t
he geothermal endo-upwelling process (Rougerie and Wauthy, 1986, 1993)
. Observations and micro-analysis carried out on insular phosphate sam
ples, and a comparative study of hydrocarbons extracted from kopara an
d phosphate, indicate a genetic link between the diagenetic evolution
of the trapped OM and the apatite precipitation as follows: growth of
thick microbial mats in brackish ponds and closed lagoons, and anoxic
preservation of OM; oxydative degradation of these OM, Liberation of P
O43- ions to apatite saturation; primary apatite precipitation and pho
sphatization of the detrital carbonates through substitution of CO3 by
PO4; polyphasic enrichment of the phosphate deposit induced by eustat
ic changes, through primary apatite dissolution and secondary apatite
precipitation. This model of phosphogenesis provides explanations that
are both qualitative (trapped organic matter and apatite substitution
by elements in ratios corresponding to those of deep marine waters) a
nd quantitative (10(6) to 10(8) tons of apatite accumulated on small a
tolls), lacking in previous models (degradation of guano or volcanic m
aterial).