Modern dolomite formation has been found to occur under
anaerobic conditions in
supersaturated saline
lagoons such as those at the
Rio de Janeiro coast of
Brazil, namely, Lagoa Vermelha and Brejo do Espinho. There are many other localities where modern dolomite forms, notably along
sabkhas in the
Persian Gulf, but also in sedimentary basins bearing gas hydrates and hypersaline lakes. It is often thought that dolomite nucleates with the help of
sulfate-reducing bacteria (e.g.
Desulfovibrio brasiliensis), but other
microbial metabolisms have been also found to mediate in dolomite formation. Vast deposits of dolomite are present in the geological record, but the mineral is relatively rare in the
Cenozoic (Tertiary Era representing the last 66 million years of Earth's history) and in modern environments. Reproducible, inorganic low-temperature syntheses of dolomite are yet to be performed. Usually, the initial inorganic precipitation of a metastable "precursor" (such as magnesium calcite) can easily be achieved. The precursor phase will theoretically change gradually into a more stable phase (such as partially ordered dolomite) during periodical intervals of dissolution and re-precipitation. The general principle governing the course of this irreversible
geochemical reaction has been coined "breaking
Ostwald's step rule". High diagenetic temperatures, such as those of groundwater flowing along deeply rooted fault systems affecting some sedimentary successions or deeply buried limestone rocks allocate
dolomitization. Dolomite is also found in continental saline lakes in Australia. The geochemical conditions considered to be favourable to the precipitation of dolomite in these lakes are their high salinity, high Mg/Ca ratios, and high alkalinity.. A recent biotic synthetic experiment claims to have precipitated ordered dolomite when
anoxygenic photosynthesis proceeds in the presence of manganese(II). A still perplexing example of an organogenic origin is that of the reported formation of dolomite in the
urinary bladder of a
Dalmatian dog, possibly as the result of an illness or infection. ==Uses==