Abstract

The global carbon cycle model is presented as a natural self-regulating machine that provides renewable biomass synthesis during evolution. The machine consists of two parts, geological and biosphere. Between the parts, there is an interaction. The geological part is controlled by the movement of lithosphere plates, which is under the guidance of gravitational forces from celestial bodies acting on the Earth. The movement of the lithosphere plates is divided into a phase of a relatively quick movement, occurring in the tectonically active state of the Earth’s crust, named the orogenic period, and a phase of a relatively slow movement, occurring in the phase of the tectonically quiet state of the crust, named geosynclinal period. In the orogenic period, the energy of moving plates’ collisions is sufficient to initiate sulfate reduction, proceeding in the subduction zone. This is the reaction where sedimentary organic matter is oxidized. Resultant CO2 is injected into “atmosphere—hydrosphere” system of the Earth. Its concentration achieves maximal values, whereas oxygen concentration drops to a minimum since it reacts with the reduced sulfur forms that evolve in the thermochemical sulfate reduction and due to binding with reduced forms of metals, coming to the Earth’s surface with volcanic exhalations. Carbon dioxide initiates photosynthesis and the associated biosphere events. In the geosynclinal period, the sulfate reduction ceases, and CO2 does not enter the system anymore, though photosynthesis in the biosphere proceeds in the regime of CO2 pool depletion. Under such conditions, the surface temperature on the Earth decreases, ending with glaciations. The successive depletion of the CO2 pool results in a regular sequence of climatic changes on the Earth. The ratio of CO2/O2 is the key environmental parameter in the orogenic cycle providing climatic changes. They consistently vary from hot and anaerobic in the orogenic period to glacial and aerobic by the end of the geosynclinal period. The climatic changes provide biotic turnover. Especially abrupt changes accompany the transition to a new orogenic cycle, resulting in mass extinction of organisms and the entry of huge masses of biogenic material into the sediment. This provided the conditions for the formation of rocks rich in organic matter (“black shales”). It is shown that the suggested model is supported by numerous geological and paleontological data evidencing the orogenic cycles’ existence and their relationship with the evolution of photosynthesis.

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