Abstract
The radiation of macroscopic animals in the Early Cambrian, commonly be called as ‘Cambrian explosion’, had a close relationship with Earth oxygenation. These macrofossils are widely preserved within the Early Cambrian in the northern and western Yangtze Craton. In order to show the casual relationship between animal evolution and Earth redox environment, Mo content and isotopic composition analyses have been conducted on dolomites of the Tianzhushan Formation and the black shales of the Shuijingtuo Formation from the lowermost Cambrian profile in the eastern Huangling dome, northern Yangtze Craton. The calcitic dolostones from the Tianzhushan Formation display lower concentrations of Mo contents (0.055–0.666 ppm) than that of the black silty shales from the Shuijingtuo Formation (6.0–172 ppm). This magnitude difference is most likely related to the different lithologies due to Mo enrichment in shales. The Mo isotope values (δ98/95Mo) of the calcitic dolostones for the Tianzhushan Formation vary from −0.73‰ to 0.41‰. In comparison, the black sandy shales from the Shuijingtuo Formation exhibit δ98/95Mo of −1.04–1.84‰, including 5 samples from the earliest Shuijingtuo Formation displaying systematically higher δ98/95Mo values (0.09–1.84‰) than those of the other 5 samples from upper layers (δ98/95Mo = −1.04 to −0.19‰). These geochemical data suggest that the redox environment of the early Cambrian is fluctuating, and the peak oxygenation of the ocean had already reached a level similar to modern environments. According to the Mo concentrations and δ98/95Mo data, the sedimentary succession can be divided into five intervals, which are closely correlated to the episodic evolution of early life in the Cambrian. Together with the available published data from other profiles in the Yangtze Craton, our new data reveal that the higher oxidation environment had a positive effect on the evolution of early life.
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