Abstract

The Ediacaran Period (ca. 635–539 Ma) was an eventful interval in Earth history, during which a succession of biological and environmental changes, including episodic ocean oxygenation events (OOEs), paved the way for the Cambrian radiations of animal life. To better understand the evolution of ocean redox conditions and to estimate the extent of seafloor oxygenation during this period, we analysed molybdenum (Mo) isotope compositions and redox sensitive element (RSE) concentrations from a continuous, mid-slope section of the Doushantuo Formation (ca. 635–560 Ma) of the Nanhua Basin on the South China Craton. Alongside an updated compilation of published Mo isotope and RSE data, our new data show that three OOEs occurred within a generally anoxic Ediacaran ocean, with the last, particularly extensive event occurring during deposition of Doushantuo Member IV. Here we show how the global balance of redox-related Mo sinks shifted dynamically in response to these transient OOEs, which correlate well with the first appearance of Ediacaran fossil groups and so may have triggered or stimulated biotic innovations and radiations. Moreover, the spatial distribution of the Mo data from multiple sections supports episodic expansion of a euxinic wedge on the slopes of the Nanhua Basin, consistent with pyrite burial as a potential cause of the OOEs.

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