Vasiliki Lamprinou’s research while affiliated with National and Kapodistrian University of Athens and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (2)


Geological map of the Aedipos area, NW of Euboea (AF = Aedipsos Fault; modified after Kanellopoulos et al. [25]). The sampling site is marked with a black dot. The geographical coordinates are in EGSA ‘87.
(A) Overview of the study site. (B–E) Paired views of normal images (B,D) and corresponding thermal images (C,E). A column shows the temperature scale (°C) on the right side of the thermal pictures. (B,C) Photo of the stalactites where the samples were collected. (D,E) Overview of the hot spring at the bottom of the cave and some stalactites at the top.
Evaluated XRD pattern.
Back-scattered electron images (BSEI) of (A) laminated stalactite from Aedipsos; (B–D) are false color BSEI results of the mapping, displaying the distribution of (B) Ca (green), (C) S (red), and (D) Yb (yellow).
Back-scattered electron images (BSEI) presenting (A) laminated facies of stalactite, (B) laminae with shrubs that expand upward by irregular branching, (C) laminae consisting of micritic crystals of calcite and into it diatoms are trapped, (D) false color BSEI, derived from the corresponding black and white BSEI (see (C)), displaying the distribution of Ca (purple), S (yellow) and Si (orange) where the diatoms are distinct, (E,F) holes and grooves in calcite crystals, suggesting the presence of endolithic Cyanobacteria.

+4

Speleothems and Biomineralization Processes in Hot Spring Environment: The Case of Aedipsos (Edipsos), Euboea (Evia) Island, Greece
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2022

·

219 Reads

·

5 Citations

·

Vasiliki Lamprinou

·

Artemis Politi

·

[...]

·

Caves with hot springs and speleothem deposits are infrequent environments of high scientific interest due to their unique environmental conditions. The selected site is a small open cave with a hot spring and stalactites in the Aedipsos area (NW Euboea Island, Greece), which was studied through an interdisciplinary approach. The mineralogical composition of the speleothems was determined by optical microscopy, XRD, and SEM-EDS microanalysis, and identification of the Cyanobacteria species was made based on morphological characteristics. The main mineral phase in the studied samples is calcite, with several trace elements (i.e., up to 0.48 wt.% Na2O, up to 0.73 wt.% MgO, up to 4.19 wt.% SO3, up to 0.16 wt.% SrO and up to 2.21 wt.% Yb2O3) in the mineral-chemistry composition. The dominant facies are lamination and shrubs, which are the most common among the facies of the thermogenic travertines of the area. Based on the studied stalactites, twenty-nine different Cyanobacteria species were identified, belonging to the following orders: Synechococcales (28%), Oscillatoriales (27%), Chroococcales (21%) and Nostocales (21%), and Spirulinales (3%). Among them, thermophilic species (Spirulina subtilissima) and limestone substrate species (Chroococcus lithophilus, Leptolyngbya perforans, and Leptolyngbya ercegovicii) were identified. The identified Cyanobacteria were found to participate in biomineralization processes. The most characteristic biomineralization activity is made by the endolithic Cyanobacteria destroying calcite crystals in the outer layer. In a few cases, calcified cyanobacterial sheaths were detected. The presence of filamentous Cyanobacteria, along with extracellular polymeric substance (EPS), creates a dense net resulting in the retention of calcium carbonate crystals.

Download

Citations (1)


... However, Roy et al. (2015) reported that the combined effect of pH, K + , and HCO3was effective in the distribution of S. subsalsa. As in the study of Kanellopoulos et al. (2016), S. subsalsa and Phormidium terebriforme (C.Agardh ex Gomont) Anagnostidis & Komárek were sampled together from the travertine substrates in this study (D1). The travertines are frequently colonized with Cyanobacteria mats, commonly composed of more than one taxon (Pentecost 2003, Kanellopoulos et al. 2016. ...

Reference:

The taxonomy and distribution of algae in the thermal springs of Türkiye
Thermogenic travertine deposits in Thermopylae hot springs (Greece) in association with cyanobacterial microflora.
  • Citing Article
  • July 2015

Carbonates and Evaporites