Abstract

Microbe-metazoan transitions (MMTs), representing a switch from microbe-mediated to metazoan-mediated carbonate production, have been linked to major changes in Earth-surface conditions. The ‘late Cambrian MMT’ (nomen novum), during which microbial reefs were replaced by maceriate and lithistid sponge reefs, coincided with a sharp rise in atmospheric O2 levels attributed to the Steptoean Positive Carbon Isotope Excursion (SPICE) at ~497–494 Ma. However, relationships between atmospheric oxygenation, marine redox conditions, and the MMT have not been thoroughly investigated to date. Here, we conducted paired analyses of carbonate carbon isotopes (δ13Ccarb), sulfur isotopes of carbonate-associated sulfate (δ34SCAS) and pyrite (δ34SPy), pyrite morphologies, and fossil assemblages of two upper Cambrian shallow-marine sections on the North China Platform (Tangwangzhai and Huangyangshan). The sulfur isotopic composition of framboidal pyrite (δ34SFrPy) was calculated from that of total pyrite (δ34STPy) assuming a varied fractionation with euhedral pyrite based on pyrite morphological analyses. Modelling of S-isotope fractionations (Δ34SCAS-FrPy) indicates that contemporaneous seawater had low sulfate concentrations (i.e., [SO42––]sw ~4–6 mM) with locally high spatial heterogeneity during the Rising SPICE (early to middle Paibian), which were the product of massive burial of pyrite (together with organic matter) linked to extensive oceanic anoxia. Immediately following the SPICE, a reduced pyrite burial rate and an increased flux of terrestrially sourced, 34S-depleted sulfate to shallow-marine environments resulted in lower δ34SCAS values. [SO42–]sw rose to a maximum of ~9–16 mM and became more uniform during the Post-SPICE (middle to late Jiangshanian), suggesting a more oxidized condition of seawater and the atmosphere. Rising O2 levels in both the atmosphere and marine environments triggered the late Cambrian MMT and set the stage for the subsequent Great Ordovician Biodiversity Event.

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