238U/235U in calcite is more susceptible to carbonate diagenesis

<p>The uranium&nbsp;isotopic composition&nbsp;(&delta;<sup>238</sup>U) of bulk marine&nbsp;calcium carbonates&nbsp;has been extensively explored as a promising paleoredox proxy to track the extent of global oceanic anoxia in deep time. Multiple studies have exam...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chen, X, Robinson, SA, Romaniello, SJ, Anbar, AA
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022
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Summary:<p>The uranium&nbsp;isotopic composition&nbsp;(&delta;<sup>238</sup>U) of bulk marine&nbsp;calcium carbonates&nbsp;has been extensively explored as a promising paleoredox proxy to track the extent of global oceanic anoxia in deep time. Multiple studies have examined whether primary calcium carbonates can directly capture seawater &delta;<sup>238</sup>U and whether bulk measurements of recent and ancient carbonates preserve seawater U isotope signatures. Here we assess the role of diagenesis in altering &delta;<sup>238</sup>U signatures in&nbsp;carbonates sediments&nbsp;that have a primary calcitic&nbsp;mineralogy&nbsp;at the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), an interval with rapid global warming and oceanic&nbsp;deoxygenation&nbsp;at &sim;56 million years ago.</p> <p>Although primary abiotic and biogenic calcium carbonates (aragonite and calcite) can directly capture seawater &delta;<sup>238</sup>U with small offsets (&lt;0.1&permil;) relative to modern seawater, diagenetic alteration of Bahamian shallow-water platform carbonate sediments that have a predominantly primary aragonitic mineralogy resulted in significantly larger offsets (up to 0.6&permil;). Since U concentration in primary&nbsp;aragonite&nbsp;is at least one order of magnitude higher than primary calcite (&gt;1 ppm vs. &lt;0.1&nbsp;ppm), &delta;<sup>238</sup>U in calcite should be even more susceptible to diagenesis than that in aragonite.</p> <p>We find strong evidence of this effect in analysis of &delta;<sup>238</sup>U in PETM shallow-water carbonate sediments from Drilling Project (ODP) Hole 871C (Limalok&nbsp;Guyot, Pacific Ocean). Our results reveal large fluctuations in bulk carbonate &delta;<sup>238</sup>U from &minus;0.69 to +0.71&permil; around the PETM boundary but consistently heavier &delta;<sup>238</sup>U (between &minus;0.14 and +0.47&permil;) than modern seawater outside of this interval. The significantly lighter &delta;<sup>238</sup>U values than modern seawater were interpreted to result from the operation of a&nbsp;Mn oxide&nbsp;shuttle. The heavier &delta;<sup>238</sup>U values are most likely caused by authigenic reductive accumulation of U(IV) in&nbsp;pore waters&nbsp;below the sediment-water interface. We found that carbonate &delta;<sup>238</sup>U values higher than modern seawater tend to increase with increasing U/Ca. This relationship is well-explained by an authigenic reductive accumulation model that simply assumes addition to primary calcite during diagenesis of calcitic cements containing isotopically heavier U(IV).</p> <p>Our work confirms expectations that &delta;<sup>238</sup>U in primary calcite is more susceptible to the amount of diagenetic&nbsp;cementation&nbsp;compared to primary aragonite, and that variations of &delta;<sup>238</sup>U in carbonate sediments with a primary calcitic mineralogy would more dominantly reflect the local redox state of depositional and early diagenetic environments. It is essential to identify the original carbonate mineralogy, the diagenetic history, and constrain the redox state of local deposition environments of sedimentary&nbsp;carbonate rocks&nbsp;when applying bulk carbonate &delta;<sup>238</sup>U as a global proxy for oceanic anoxia in deep time.</p>