4.7 Article

Progress towards an improved Precambrian seawater 87Sr/86Sr curve

Journal

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 224, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103869

Keywords

Strontium isotopes; Precambrian; Carbonates; Diagenesis; Dissolution methods; Weathering; Supercontinent cycles

Funding

  1. NERC [NE/P013643/1]
  2. Faculty of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, UCL

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The secular trend of seawater strontium isotope ratio provides important information about changes in ocean composition and global tectonic events. This study compiled and evaluated strontium isotope ratio data of Precambrian marine sedimentary rocks and generated an improved seawater Sr-87/Sr-86 curve. The results indicate an earlier deviation of seawater Sr-87/Sr-86 from the mantle, as well as stronger oscillations and better correspondence with supercontinent cycles than previously shown.
The secular trend of seawater strontium isotope ratio (Sr-87/Sr-86) reflects changes in the relative contributions of continental versus mantle reservoirs to ocean composition, and informs global tectonic events, weathering rates and biogeochemical cycling through Earth history. However, the Precambrian seawater Sr-87/Sr-86 curve is known in far less detail than its Phanerozoic counterpart. For this study, we compiled 2249 strontium isotope ratios of Precambrian marine sedimentary rocks published since 2002, alongside previously compiled older data. Here we evaluate the uncertainty of all published data for constraining coeval seawater Sr-87/Sr-86 using four criteria (depositional environment, diagenetic alteration, age constraint and dissolution method). The resultant seawater Sr-87/Sr-86 curve uses mainly 'high certainty' data and shows an overall increasing trend from ~0.7005 at c. 3.5 Ga to > 0.7089 towards the end of the Ediacaran Period. The improved curve shows an earlier deviation of seawater Sr-87/Sr-86 from the contemporaneous mantle by c. 3.5 Ga, which might reflect the first significant emergence of evolved continental crust related to nascent tectonics. Additionally, the updated curve records two major rises at 2.5-2.2 Ga and 1.9-1.7 Ga in addition to a well-established event at 0.8-0.5 Ga. Despite the relative scarcity of high-certainty data, these two increases are consistent with enhanced continental weathering following the onset of oxidative weathering and assembly of the supercontinent Nuna, respectively. Although confirmation of these two events awaits more high-certainty data, Precambrian seawater Sr-87/Sr-86 experienced stronger oscillations and better correspondence with supercontinent cycles than previously shown.

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