The sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern Australia

<p>Eukaryotic life arose around 1.6 billion years ago, but for much of Earth history has been ecologically and biologically conservative. There is a gap of around a billion years between the first eukaryotic fossils and their rise to ecological prominence around 800 million years ago. The caus...

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Main Author: Johnson, B
Other Authors: Tosca, N
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
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author Johnson, B
author2 Tosca, N
author_facet Tosca, N
Johnson, B
author_sort Johnson, B
collection OXFORD
description <p>Eukaryotic life arose around 1.6 billion years ago, but for much of Earth history has been ecologically and biologically conservative. There is a gap of around a billion years between the first eukaryotic fossils and their rise to ecological prominence around 800 million years ago. The causes of this delay in eukaryote evolution are widely debated, but in recent years the role of oxygen, has been proposed as a major driver in the evolution of complex life. Oxygen drives metabolism for energy intensive organisms like eukaryotes, it is also a key component of eukaryotic biomolecules. Oxygen is also a key player in the cycling of essential bio-limiting nutrients such as phosphorus. Some have hypothesized that in the low oxygen Proterozoic world, phosphorus was scarce and thus limited primary productivity, slowing the oxygenation of the Earth and locking the planet into a billion-year long period of environmental stasis. Additionally, the iron rich oceans are proposed to have sequestered phosphorus in sediments as iron phosphate minerals. To date, neither of these hypotheses have been robustly tested against the sedimentary record.</p> <p>To test these two hypotheses, I conducted a high-resolution study of exquisitely preserved ~1.4 - 1.3 Ga sedimentary rocks from the Roper Superbasin (RSB), northern Australia. I find no evidence of sedimentary sequestration of phosphorus as Fe-phosphate in the examined sediments. Additionally, I find that sediments were deposited under ferruginous and oxic conditions, contrary to published work. Also, in contrast to previous work, I find that the RSB is a restricted basin and underwent periods of disconnection from the global ocean. As an epicratonic basin enclosed on multiple sides, the RSB is unsuitable for investigating global ocean conditions in the Proterozoic. However, such locations appear to be commonnly preserved in this interval, and may have been important sites for phosphorus deposition. Regardless of ocean connection the RSB, and locations like it, are where we find eukaryote fossils, and so were obviously an important part of eukaryote evolution. The questions raised by this study highlight how much is left to learn about Earths distant past and the organisms that inhabited the planet at that time.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:6a98e112-a5a6-42e1-be06-fa5a7bcf889e2022-03-26T18:58:32ZThe sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern AustraliaThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:6a98e112-a5a6-42e1-be06-fa5a7bcf889eGeology, EconomicGeology, StratigraphicEnglishHyrax Deposit2021Johnson, BTosca, NTostevin, RRobinson, S<p>Eukaryotic life arose around 1.6 billion years ago, but for much of Earth history has been ecologically and biologically conservative. There is a gap of around a billion years between the first eukaryotic fossils and their rise to ecological prominence around 800 million years ago. The causes of this delay in eukaryote evolution are widely debated, but in recent years the role of oxygen, has been proposed as a major driver in the evolution of complex life. Oxygen drives metabolism for energy intensive organisms like eukaryotes, it is also a key component of eukaryotic biomolecules. Oxygen is also a key player in the cycling of essential bio-limiting nutrients such as phosphorus. Some have hypothesized that in the low oxygen Proterozoic world, phosphorus was scarce and thus limited primary productivity, slowing the oxygenation of the Earth and locking the planet into a billion-year long period of environmental stasis. Additionally, the iron rich oceans are proposed to have sequestered phosphorus in sediments as iron phosphate minerals. To date, neither of these hypotheses have been robustly tested against the sedimentary record.</p> <p>To test these two hypotheses, I conducted a high-resolution study of exquisitely preserved ~1.4 - 1.3 Ga sedimentary rocks from the Roper Superbasin (RSB), northern Australia. I find no evidence of sedimentary sequestration of phosphorus as Fe-phosphate in the examined sediments. Additionally, I find that sediments were deposited under ferruginous and oxic conditions, contrary to published work. Also, in contrast to previous work, I find that the RSB is a restricted basin and underwent periods of disconnection from the global ocean. As an epicratonic basin enclosed on multiple sides, the RSB is unsuitable for investigating global ocean conditions in the Proterozoic. However, such locations appear to be commonnly preserved in this interval, and may have been important sites for phosphorus deposition. Regardless of ocean connection the RSB, and locations like it, are where we find eukaryote fossils, and so were obviously an important part of eukaryote evolution. The questions raised by this study highlight how much is left to learn about Earths distant past and the organisms that inhabited the planet at that time.</p>
spellingShingle Geology, Economic
Geology, Stratigraphic
Johnson, B
The sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern Australia
title The sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern Australia
title_full The sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern Australia
title_fullStr The sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern Australia
title_full_unstemmed The sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern Australia
title_short The sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry of the ~1.4 ga Roper Superbasin Northern Australia
title_sort sedimentology mineralogy and geochemistry of the 1 4 ga roper superbasin northern australia
topic Geology, Economic
Geology, Stratigraphic
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