Abstract

The Ediacaran Period (ca. 635–538 Ma) was a critical interval in Earth’s history, bridging the Proterozoic and the Phanerozoic Earth systems. It witnessed the diversification of eukaryotic phytoplanktons in the early stage, the evolution of macroscopic multicellular lives in the late stage, and frequent oscillations of carbonate carbon isotopes of large magnitudes, presumably reflecting large perturbations of the global carbon cycle. It has been proposed that a large dissolved organic carbon (DOC) pool, hundreds to thousands times larger than the present one, was developed in the Ediacaran deep ocean. The wax and wane of the marine DOC pool might be responsible for the secular variation of carbon isotopes of marine dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) pool, which was recorded in the carbonate carbon isotope chemostratigraphy. However, neither the extent nor the evolutionary history of marine DOC pool in the Ediacaran ocean has been well constrained. In this study, we use Germanium/silica (Ge/Si) ratios of chert nodules from the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation in the Yangtze Gorges area, South China, to trace the evolution of marine DOC pool. These chert nodules yield abundant microfossils, i.e. acanthomorphic acritarchs, and were precipitated in the early diagenetic replacement of calcareous silty/muddy sediments. Most chert nodules show positive correlations between Al contents and Ge/Si ratios, which can be resolved by a binary mixing between a silica (quartz) endmember and an Al-rich silicate (clay) endmember. On the one hand, the Ge/Si ratios of silica component ((Ge/Si)SiO2) are comparable to the modern seawater composition, suggesting the normal seawater rather than hydrothermal fluids was the major source of Si. On the other, the Ge/Si ratios of the clay component ((Ge/Si)clay) are one to two orders of magnitudes higher than that of normal marine clays. The Ge-enrichment of the clay component could be attributed to the extensive chelation of Ge by organic ligands and massive formation of organic-Ge-Clay complex at high DOC concentration. This observation supports the presence of a large DOC pool in the Ediacaran ocean. In addition, there is an increase of (Ge/Si)clay from the Member II to Member III of the Doushantuo Formation, suggesting an increase of DOC concentration. The expansion of marine DOC pool is coincident with the reduction of the sizes of the upper acanthomorphic acritarch assemblage in the Member III. We suggest that the increase of marine DOC pool might be attributed to the reduction of sizes of particulate organic matter, which favored DOC generation and accumulation in the Ediacaran seawater.

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