Abstract

The upper Ediacaran-lower Cambrian (551–526 Ma) sedimentary succession of the Yangtze Block, South China, hosts abundant chert that formed contemporaneously with the Neoproterozoic Oxidation Event and the Cambrian Explosion. The effect of biological evolution, especially the rise of silica-secreting organisms, on marine Si cycling during the Ediacaran-Cambrian (E-C) transition remains controversial. This paper describes results of a petrological and geochemical investigation aimed at elucidating the origin of the chert and silica biogeochemical cycling during the E-C transition. Our results reveal that the studied chert is dominated by quartz and carbonate. The widespread presence of relict carbonate in inferred peritidal chert deposits suggests that carbonate replacement was an especially common silicification pattern of this facies, whereas the lack of carbonate precursors in subtidal strata argues in favor of primary and biogenic silica precipitation in deposits of this facies. Silicon isotope compositions, relative abundances of Al, Fe, and Mn and rare earth element (REE) + Y concentrations suggest that seawater rather than high-temperature hydrothermal fluid was the primary silica source of the studied cherts. Secular variation of chert Si isotopes reveals that marine silica cycling was closely linked with biological activity. Although silicification was abiological during the Precambrian, it may have been facilitated by microbial activities, especially the widespread formation of cyanobacterial mats. The flourishing of siliceous sponges and radiolarians in the early Cambrian ocean may have served as a global silica sink thus enhancing biological control of the silica cycle after Cambrian time. The studied chert deposits not only demonstrate the silica-rich nature of the global ocean during the E-C transition, but also record the transition of silica cycling from abiological to biological processes and the effect of the evolutionary radiation of silica-secreting organisms during the Cambrian Explosion on silica cycling.

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