Abstract

Although the earliest animals might have evolved in certain “sweet spots” in the last 10 million years of Ediacaran (550–541 Ma), the Cambrian explosion requires sufficiently high levels of oxygen (O2) in the atmosphere and diverse habitable niches in the substantively oxygenated seafloor. However, previous studies indicate that the marine redox landscape was temporally oscillatory and spatially heterogeneous, suggesting the decoupling of atmospheric oxygenation and oceanic oxidation. The seawater sulfate concentration is controlled by both the atmospheric O2 level and the marine redox condition, with sulfide oxidation in continents as the major source, and sulfate reduction and pyrite burial as the major sink of seawater sulfate. It is thus important to quantify the sulfate concentration on the eve of the Cambrian explosion. In this study, we measured the pyrite contents and pyrite sulfur isotopes of black shale samples from the Yurtus Formation (Cambrian Series 2) in the Tarim Block, northwestern China. A numerical model is developed to calculate the seawater sulfate concentration using the pyrite content and pyrite sulfur isotope data. We first calibrate some key parameters based on observations from modern marine sediments. Then, the Monte Carlo simulation is applied to reduce the uncertainty raised by loosely confined parameters. Based on the geochemical data from both Tarim and Yangtze blocks, the modeling results indicate the seawater sulfate concentration of 8.9–14 mM, suggesting the seawater sulfate concentration was already 30–50% of the present level (28 mM). High seawater sulfate concentration might be attributed to the enhanced terrestrial sulfate input and widespread ocean oxygenation on the eve of the Cambrian explosion.

Highlights

  • The seawater sulfate concentration is a critical indicator of the redox condition in the atmosphereocean system

  • The Fe speciation and pyrite sulfur isotope data are tabulated in Table 1, and the Fe speciation data have been reported in Zhu et al (2021)

  • Pyrite sulfur isotope (δ34Spy) ranges from -8.2‰ to +16.1‰, with most being higher than 5.0‰ in the lower black shale interval

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Summary

Introduction

The seawater sulfate concentration is a critical indicator of the redox condition in the atmosphereocean system. The seawater sulfate concentration is controlled by both marine redox condition and atmospheric O2 level, because oxidative weathering of sulfide in continents is one of the major sources, and sulfate reduction and pyrite burial represent one of the major sinks of seawater sulfate (Canfield, 2004; Canfield and Farquhar, 2009). Quantifying the Seawater Sulfate Concentration condition of the atmosphere-ocean system. Reconstruction of seawater sulfate concentration would provide a direct constraint on the global ocean redox condition and the atmospheric O2 level. The enrichment of redoxsensitive elements (e.g., V, U, Mo) in the early Ediacaran black shales implies the oxidation of the deep ocean immediately after the Marinoan Snowball Earth glaciation (Sahoo et al, 2012; Sahoo et al, 2016). We will calculate the early Cambrian seawater sulfate concentration by this methodology

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