'Biomineralisation' is the process by which living organisms produce minerals, often to harden or stiffen existing tissues. Examples include
silicates in
algae,
carbonates in
diatoms and
invertebrates, and
calcium phosphates and carbonates in
vertebrates. These minerals often form structural features such as sea
shells and the
bone in
mammals and
birds.
Organisms have been producing mineralised
skeletons for the past 550 million years. Other examples include
copper,
iron and
gold deposits involving bacteria. As a result biomineralization is employed in
metal extraction.
The aim of
biomimetics is to mimic the natural way of producing minerals such as
apatites. Many man-made crystals require elevated temperatures and strong chemical solutions whereas the organisms have long been able to lay down elaborate mineral structures at ambient temperatures. Often the mineral phases are not pure but are made as
composites which entail an organic part, often
protein, which takes part in and controls the biomineralisation. These composites are often not only as hard as the pure mineral but also tougher, as at last, the micro-environment controls biomineralisation.
Biominerals generally consist of either
calcium,
iron, or
silicon. The hardness of biominerals depends on both the degree of mineralisation (i.e., structure) and the type of mineral.
See also
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Diatomaceous earth
References
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Control And Design Principles In Biological Mineralization, Addadi, L. and S. Weiner, , , Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 1992
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Biomineralization: An overview, Boskey, A.L., , , Connective Tissue Research, 2003 PMID 12952166
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The Little Workers of the Mining Industry, McPhee, Joseph, , , Science Creative Quarterly, 2006
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Micro-environmental controls on biomineralization: superficial processes of apatite and calcite precipitation in Quaternary soils, Roussillon, France, Schmittner, Karl-Erich and Giresse, Pierre, , , Sedimentology, 1999
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Design strategies in mineralized biological materials, Weiner, S. and L. Addadi, , , Journal of Materials Chemistry, 1997
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Biomineralization, Dauphin, Y., , , Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry (R.B. King ed)., Wiley & Sons, 2005
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Biomineralization and diagenesis in the Scleractinia : part I, biomineralization, Cuif, J.P. and Sorauf, J.E., , , Bull. Tohoku Univ. Museum,, 2001
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Structures, organo mineral compositions and diagenetic changes in biominerals, Dauphin, Y., , , Current Opinion in Colloid & Interface Science, 2002
External links
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An overview of the bacteria involved in biomineralization from the Science Creative Quarterly
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[1] http://biomin.geol.u-psud.fr
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[2] http://biocalc.geol.u-psud.fr