4.8 Article

Atmospheric oxygenation three billion years ago

Journal

NATURE
Volume 501, Issue 7468, Pages 535-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature12426

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Funding

  1. Agouron Institute Geobiology Fellowship
  2. NSERC PDF
  3. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF53]
  4. Danish Agency for Science, Technology, and Innovation
  5. European Research Council
  6. National Research Foundation in Pretoria

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It is widely assumed that atmospheric oxygen concentrations remained persistently low (less than 10(-5) times present levels) for about the first 2 billion years of Earth's history(1). The first long-term oxygenation of the atmosphere is thought to have taken place around 2.3 billion years ago, during the Great Oxidation Event(2,3). Geochemical indications of transient atmospheric oxygenation, however, date back to 2.6-2.7 billion years ago(4-6). Here we examine the distribution of chromium isotopes and redox-sensitive metals in the approximately 3-billion-year-old Nsuze palaeosol and in the near-contemporaneous Ijzermyn iron formation from the Pongola Supergroup, South Africa. We find extensive mobilization of redox-sensitive elements through oxidative weathering. Furthermore, using our data we compute a best minimum estimate for atmospheric oxygen concentrations at that time of 331024 times present levels. Overall, our findings suggest that there were appreciable levels of atmospheric oxygen about 3 billion years ago, more than 600 million years before the Great Oxidation Event and some 300-400 million years earlier than previous indications for Earth surface oxygenation.

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