Abstract

For the first four billion years ofEarth's history, climate was marked by apparent stability and warmth despite the Sun having lower luminosity1. Proposed mechanisms for maintaining an elevated partial pressure of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere ([Formula: see text]) centre on a reduction in the weatherability of Earth's crust and therefore in the efficiency of carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere2. However, the effectiveness of these mechanisms remains debated2,3. Here we use a global carbon cycle model to explore the evolution of processes that govern marine pH, a factor that regulates the partitioning of carbon between the ocean and the atmosphere. We find that elevated rates of 'reverse weathering'-that is, the consumption of alkalinity and generation of acidity during marine authigenic clay formation4-7-enhanced the retention of carbon within the ocean-atmosphere system, leading to an elevated [Formula: see text] baseline. Although this process is dampened by sluggish kinetics today, we propose that more prolific rates of reverse weathering would have persisted under the pervasively silica-rich conditions8,9 that dominated Earth's early oceans. This distinct ocean and coupled carbon-silicon cycle state would have successfully maintained the equable and ice-free environment that characterized most of the Precambrian period. Further, we propose that during this time, the establishment of a strong negative feedback between marine pH and authigenic clay formation would have also enhanced climate stability by mitigating large swings in [Formula: see text]-a critical component of Earth's natural thermostat that would have been dominant for most of Earth's history. We speculate that the late ecological rise of siliceous organisms8 and a resulting decline in silica-rich conditions dampened the reverse weathering buffer, destabilizing Earth's climate system and lowering baseline [Formula: see text].

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