Abstract

A Neoproterozoic succession of glaciomarine deposits of probably Sturtian age is preserved on the Yangtze Platform in South China. At that time, the South China block was located in intermediate to low paleolatitudes at ca. 40°. The snowball Earth hypothesis offers one possible explanation for the occurrence of low latitude tillites. The hypothesis is largely based on geological and geochemical observation made in deposits underlying or overlying such tillites on several continents. In contrast our study focuses on evidence offered by the tillites themselves. We use major, trace and rare earth geochemistry to evaluate the environmental conditions prevailing during the glaciation. Of particular interest are the intensity of chemical weathering and the relative degree of oxygenation of Neoproterozoic (Nanhuan-Sinian) marine bottom waters. CIA values were obtained from preglacial sand- and siltstones, the matrix of the glacial deposits, fine-grained clastic sediments of a unit intercalated in the glacial succession, and postglacial siltstones and black shales. The data indicate relatively low degrees of chemical weathering for the glacial deposits. In contrast, pre- and postglacial deposits display comparatively elevated levels. This is also true for the intercalated unit, which we interpret as the product of a warmer and more humid interglacial period. Data for S/TOC, U/Th, Cd, Mo, and the Ce anom of the glaciomarine samples indicate the presence of oxic bottom waters during the glaciation. The snowball Earth hypothesis predicts the shutdown of chemical weathering on the continents and complete anoxia of the global ocean largely covered by sea ice for several million years. The geochemical record of the Neoproterozoic tillites on the Yangtze Platform is difficult to reconcile with the snowball Earth hypothesis.

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