“…First, organic matter coats aragonite crystals in the skeleton (Clode and Marshall, 2002), and elevated organic matter content is closely associated with the relatively disordered centers of calcification (COCs; also called "rapid accretion deposits" or RADs) (Benzerara et al, 2011;Falini et al, 2013;Von Euw et al, 2017). Second, organic molecules extracted from the skeleton have been attributed to certain roles in crystal growth (Constantz and Weiner, 1988;Weiner and Addadi, 1991;Allemand et al, 1998;Goldberg, 2001;Cuif et al, 2008;Reggi et al, 2014;Takeuchi et al, 2016), with some proteins even capable of inducing spontaneous aragonite precipitation from seawater . Finally, the unit cell of biogenic aragonite contracts after annealing (i.e., heating and allowing to cool), presumably due to the removal of the SOM from the lattice (Pokroy et al, 2004;Reggi et al, 2014;Zolotoyabko, 2017).…”