thumb|Modern thrombolites in Lake Clifton, Western Australia|400x400px thumb|Jurassic thrombolite formed around a tree trunk; Purbeck Formation, [[Isle of Portland, Dorset, England.|400x400px]] thumb|Fossil Thrombolites at Lake Walyungup|400x400px Thrombolites (from Ancient Greek θρόμβος thrómbos meaning "clot" and λῐ́θος líthos meaning "stone") are clotted accretionary structures formed in shallow water by the trapping, binding, and cementation of sedimentary grains by biofilms of microorganisms, especially cyanobacteria.
thumb|Modern thrombolites in Lake Clifton, Western Australia|400x400px thumb|Jurassic thrombolite formed around a tree trunk; Purbeck Formation, [[Isle of Portland, Dorset, England.|400x400px]] thumb|Fossil Thrombolites at Lake Walyungup|400x400px Thrombolites (from Ancient Greek θρόμβος thrómbos meaning "clot" and λῐ́θος líthos meaning "stone") are clotted accretionary structures formed in shallow water by the trapping, binding, and cementation of sedimentary grains by biofilms of microorganisms, especially cyanobacteria.
== Structures == Thrombolites have a clotted structure without the laminae of stromatolites. Each clot within a thrombolite mound is a separate cyanobacterial colony. The clots are on the scale of millimetres to centimetres and may be interspersed with sand, mud or sparry carbonate. Clots that make up thrombolites are called thromboids to avoid confusion with other clotted textures. The larger clots make up more than 40% of a thrombolite's volume and each clot has a complex internal structure of cells and rimmed lobes resulting primarily from calcification of the cyanobacterial colony.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).