Shale heavy metal isotope records of low environmental O2 between two Archean oxidation events.

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Date

2022-04-26

Authors

Ostrander, Chadlin
Kendall, Brian
Gordon, Gwyneth
Nielsen, Sune
Zheng, Wang
Anbar, Ariel

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Frontiers Media

Abstract

Evidence of molecular oxygen (O₂) accumulation at Earth’s surface during the Archean (4.0–2.5 billion years ago, or Ga) seems to increase in its abundance and compelling nature toward the end of the eon, during the runup to the Great Oxidation Event. Yet, many details of this late- Archean O₂ story remain under-constrained, such as the extent, tempo, and location of O₂ accumulation. Here, we present a detailed Fe, Tl, and U isotope study of shales from a continuous sedimentary sequence deposited between ~2.6 and ~2.5 Ga and recovered from the Pilbara Craton of Western Australia (the Wittenoom and Mt. Sylvia formations preserved in drill core ABDP9). We find a progressive decrease in bulk-shale Fe isotope compositions moving up core (as low as δ⁵⁶Fe = –0.78 ± 0.08‰; 2SD) accompanied by invariant authigenic Tl isotope compositions (average ε²⁰⁵TlA = –2.0 ± 0.6; 2SD) and bulk-shale U isotope compositions (average δ²³⁸U= –0.30 ± 0.05‰; 2SD) that are both not appreciably different from crustal rocks or bulk silicate Earth. While there are multiple possible interpretations of the decreasing δ⁵⁶Fe values, many, to include the most compelling, invoke strictly anaerobic processes. The invariant and near-crustal ε²⁰⁵TlA and δ²³⁸U values point even more strongly to this interpretation, requiring reducing to only mildly oxidizing conditions over ten-million-year timescales in the late- Archean. For the atmosphere, our results permit either homogenous and low O₂ partial pressures (between 10−⁶.³ and 10−⁶ present atmospheric level) or heterogeneous and spatially restricted O₂ accumulation nearest the sites of O₂ production. For the ocean, our results permit minimal penetration of O₂ in marine sediments over large areas of the seafloor, at most sufficient for the burial of Fe oxide minerals but insufficient for the burial of Mn oxide minerals. The persistently low background O₂ levels implied by our dataset between ~2.6 and ~2.5 Ga contrast with the timeframes immediately before and after, where strong evidence is presented for transient Archean Oxidation Events. Viewed in this broader context, our data support the emerging narrative that Earth’s initial oxygenation was a dynamic process that unfolded in fits-and-starts over many hundreds-of-millions of years.

Description

This article is published in Frontiers of Earth Science: Ostrander, C. M., Kendall, B., Gordon, G. W., Nielsen, S. G., Zheng, W., & Anbar, A. D. (2022). Shale Heavy Metal Isotope Records of Low Environmental O2 between two Archean oxidation events. Frontiers in Earth Science, 10 and is available here: https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.833609 This article is made open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Keywords

archaen, thallium, iron, uranium, isotopes, oxygen

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