Abstract

Sedimentary rocks deposited across the Proterozoic-Phanerozoic transition record extreme climate fluctuations, a potential rise in atmospheric oxygen or re-organization of the seafloor redox landscape, and the initial diversification of animals. It is widely assumed that the inferred redox change facilitated the observed trends in biodiversity. Establishing this palaeoenvironmental context, however, requires that changes in marine redox structure be tracked by means of geochemical proxies and translated into estimates of atmospheric oxygen. Iron-based proxies are among the most effective tools for tracking the redox chemistry of ancient oceans. These proxies are inherently local, but have global implications when analysed collectively and statistically. Here we analyse about 4,700 iron-speciation measurements from shales 2,300 to 360 million years old. Our statistical analyses suggest that subsurface water masses in mid-Proterozoic oceans were predominantly anoxic and ferruginous (depleted in dissolved oxygen and iron-bearing), but with a tendency towards euxinia (sulfide-bearing) that is not observed in the Neoproterozoic era. Analyses further indicate that early animals did not experience appreciable benthic sulfide stress. Finally, unlike proxies based on redox-sensitive trace-metal abundances, iron geochemical data do not show a statistically significant change in oxygen content through the Ediacaran and Cambrian periods, sharply constraining the magnitude of the end-Proterozoic oxygen increase. Indeed, this re-analysis of trace-metal data is consistent with oxygenation continuing well into the Palaeozoic era. Therefore, if changing redox conditions facilitated animal diversification, it did so through a limited rise in oxygen past critical functional and ecological thresholds, as is seen in modern oxygen minimum zone benthic animal communities.

Highlights

  • Our statistical analyses suggest that subsurface water masses in mid-Proterozoic oceans were predominantly anoxic and ferruginous, but with a tendency towards euxinia not observed in the Neoproterozoic Era

  • Decades of work on the behavior of iron in marine sediments underpin the observation that enrichments in total (FeT) and highly reactive (FeHR) Fe phases track water column redox conditions (FeHR refers to iron in pyrite plus iron that is reactive to sulfide on early diagenetic timescales)[3,4]

  • In addition to compiling data spanning the Great Oxidation Event (GOE, ~2300 million years ago (Ma)) through the endDevonian, we provide 842 new analyses from Russia, northwestern Canada, Mongolia, Namibia, Svalbard, East Greenland and the western United States (Table S2), focusing on Neoproterozoic and Cambrian strata

Read more

Summary

Dataset compilation

The complete dataset was assembled starting with the new analyses from this study and compiling all published iron speciation analyses available at the time of submission. Samples with quantification of some iron pools, but without the full set needed to calculate the FeHR/FeT ratio (n = 103) were excluded, as were samples with FeHR/FeT ratios > 1.05 (n = 68, cutoff slightly greater than 1 chosen to allow for aggregate measurement errors—see Figure S4) This left a total of 4,535 samples (Dataset S1, total samples calculated including modern sediments[19]). These were based on age constraints within each individual section/basin, and in some cases the stratigraphic distance to age-constrained horizons and consideration of likely sedimentation rates These estimates should be treated qualitatively, the errors are likely not large with respect to the long time span of interest here. Environment 1/Inner Shelf: Shale interbedded with abundant shallowwater indicators This includes clastic beds with wave-generated sedimentary structures as well as shallow-water carbonates such as stromatolites, oolites, and rip-up conglomerates. As more data becomes available, tests between different environments (for instance between distal basinal shales and turbidite basins) can be usefully compared

Time-binned geographic analyses
Statistical analyses of iron geochemical data
New analyses
Analytical Methods
F4-65 F4-71 F4-73 F4-77 F4-82 F4-94
Section 2
Findings
Framvaren F1
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call