Dissimilatory microbial iron oxide reduction (DIR) has been hypothesized to be an important respiratory pathway on early Earth, potentially generating significant quantities of Fe(II) that have been preserved in Proterozoic and Archean sedimentary rocks. In particular, DIR has been implicated in the formation of magnetite in Precambrian marine sediments. To date, however, only one modern sedimentary environment existswhere in situ magnetite formation has been linked to DIR: the Bay of Vidy in Lake Geneva, Switzerland. Previous work at this locality has characterized a magnetic susceptibility anomaly that reflects the presence of fine-grained magnetite produced via microbial reduction of amorphous Fe(III) oxides that enter the Bay of Vidy fr...