Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans

Anoxic and iron-rich oceanic conditions prevailed throughout most of the Archean and Proterozoic (4000 to c.540 million years ago, Ma), but the oceans are hypothesised to have become progressively oxygen-rich during the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition interval, coincident with the rise of animal life....

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Main Authors: Tostevin, R, Clarkson, M, Gangl, S, Shields, G, Wood, R, Bowyer, F, Penny, A, Stirling, C
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2018
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author Tostevin, R
Clarkson, M
Gangl, S
Shields, G
Wood, R
Bowyer, F
Penny, A
Stirling, C
author_facet Tostevin, R
Clarkson, M
Gangl, S
Shields, G
Wood, R
Bowyer, F
Penny, A
Stirling, C
author_sort Tostevin, R
collection OXFORD
description Anoxic and iron-rich oceanic conditions prevailed throughout most of the Archean and Proterozoic (4000 to c.540 million years ago, Ma), but the oceans are hypothesised to have become progressively oxygen-rich during the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition interval, coincident with the rise of animal life. We utilise the uranium isotope ratio of seawater (238U/235U; reformulated as δ238U), an effective tracer of oceanic redox conditions, as a proxy for changes in the global proportion of anoxic seafloor. We present a new δ238U dataset for carbonate rocks from the Lower Nama Group, Namibia, deposited in a shelf ramp succession during the terminal Neoproterozoic (∼550 to ∼547 Ma). These data capture a transition from δ238Usimilar to the modern ocean towards persistently low δ238U (average =−0.81 ±0.06‰). Such low δ238U are consistent with enhanced U drawdown from the water column under anoxic conditions, and the preferential export of ‘heavy’ 238U to sediments following U(VI)–U(IV) reduction. Placing our results into a steady state ocean box model suggests at least a third of the global seafloor was covered by anoxic bottom waters compared with only 0.3% in today’s oxygenated oceans. Comparison with δ238U from older sediments deposited in other basins further supports an expansion of anoxic bottom waters towards the end of the Ediacaran. Our data are consistent with an emerging picture of a dominantly anoxic Ediacaran ocean punctuated by brief ocean oxygenation events. In the Nama Group, the transition towards globally widespread anoxic conditions post-dates the first appearance of both skeletal metazoans and soft-bodied fauna of the Nama Assemblage. This suggests that the global expansion of anoxia did not coincide with the decline of the Ediacaran biota, or drive the biotic turnover between the White Sea and Nama Assemblages. The impact of this global redox change on metazoan ecosystems is unclear, since the expansion of anoxia, if contained mainly within deeper waters, may not have impinged significantly upon continental shelves that host the majority of biodiversity.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ee12b0e7-2672-4d71-8f92-7171d0faa8772022-03-27T11:29:58ZUranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceansJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ee12b0e7-2672-4d71-8f92-7171d0faa877Symplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2018Tostevin, RClarkson, MGangl, SShields, GWood, RBowyer, FPenny, AStirling, CAnoxic and iron-rich oceanic conditions prevailed throughout most of the Archean and Proterozoic (4000 to c.540 million years ago, Ma), but the oceans are hypothesised to have become progressively oxygen-rich during the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition interval, coincident with the rise of animal life. We utilise the uranium isotope ratio of seawater (238U/235U; reformulated as δ238U), an effective tracer of oceanic redox conditions, as a proxy for changes in the global proportion of anoxic seafloor. We present a new δ238U dataset for carbonate rocks from the Lower Nama Group, Namibia, deposited in a shelf ramp succession during the terminal Neoproterozoic (∼550 to ∼547 Ma). These data capture a transition from δ238Usimilar to the modern ocean towards persistently low δ238U (average =−0.81 ±0.06‰). Such low δ238U are consistent with enhanced U drawdown from the water column under anoxic conditions, and the preferential export of ‘heavy’ 238U to sediments following U(VI)–U(IV) reduction. Placing our results into a steady state ocean box model suggests at least a third of the global seafloor was covered by anoxic bottom waters compared with only 0.3% in today’s oxygenated oceans. Comparison with δ238U from older sediments deposited in other basins further supports an expansion of anoxic bottom waters towards the end of the Ediacaran. Our data are consistent with an emerging picture of a dominantly anoxic Ediacaran ocean punctuated by brief ocean oxygenation events. In the Nama Group, the transition towards globally widespread anoxic conditions post-dates the first appearance of both skeletal metazoans and soft-bodied fauna of the Nama Assemblage. This suggests that the global expansion of anoxia did not coincide with the decline of the Ediacaran biota, or drive the biotic turnover between the White Sea and Nama Assemblages. The impact of this global redox change on metazoan ecosystems is unclear, since the expansion of anoxia, if contained mainly within deeper waters, may not have impinged significantly upon continental shelves that host the majority of biodiversity.
spellingShingle Tostevin, R
Clarkson, M
Gangl, S
Shields, G
Wood, R
Bowyer, F
Penny, A
Stirling, C
Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans
title Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans
title_full Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans
title_fullStr Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans
title_full_unstemmed Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans
title_short Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans
title_sort uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal ediacaran oceans
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