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The skeletons of adult echinoderms comprise large single crystals of calcite with smooth convoluted fenestrated morphologies, raising many questions about how they form. By using water etching, infrared spectroscopy, electron diffraction, and environmental scanning electron microscopy, we show that sea urchin spine regeneration proceeds via the initial deposition of amorphous calcium carbonate. Because most echinoderms produce the same type of skeletal material, they probably all use this same mechanism. Deposition of transient amorphous phases as a strategy for producing single crystals with complex morphology may have interesting implications for the development of sophisticated materials.
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Yael Politi
Center for Systems Biology Dresden
Talmon Arad
Weizmann Institute of Science
Eugenia Klein
Karolinska University Hospital
Science
Weizmann Institute of Science
Applied Materials (Israel)
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Politi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a03f7eb3d6d59b43e4d29a5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1102289
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