4.8 Article

A transient peak in marine sulfate after the 635-Ma snowball Earth

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2117341119

Keywords

snowball Earth; oxidation; sulfate; O-17 anomaly; methane oxidation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42173001]
  2. NSF [EAR-2021207]
  3. Zuckerman STEM Leadership program
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  5. Nanjing University

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A series of dramatic oceanic and atmospheric events occurred after the Marinoan snowball Earth meltdown, but the specifics of these events remain unclear. However, through the study of carbon and sulfur compounds in the Ediacaran period in South China, it was found that there was a period of high sulfate concentrations, possibly due to microbial activity. The study also found that this peak in sulfate concentrations occurred within approximately 50 ky since the onset of deglaciation, and it was likely a regional and transient event.
A series of dramatic oceanic and atmospheric events occurred in the immediate aftermath of the Marinoan snowball Earth meltdown similar to 635 My ago. However, at the 10- to 100-ky timescale, the order, rate, duration, and causal-feedback relationships of these individual events remain nebulous. Nonetheless, rapid swings in regional marine sulfate concentrations are predicted to have occurred in the aftermath of a snowball Earth, due to the nonlinear responses of its two major controlling fluxes: oxidative weathering on the continents and pyrite burial in marine sediments. Here, through the application of multiple isotope systems on various carbon and sulfur compounds, we determined extremely C-13-depleted calcite cements in the basal Ediacaran in South China to be the result of microbial sulfate reduction coupled to anaerobic oxidation of methane, which indicates an interval of high sulfate concentrations in some part of the postmeltdown ocean. Regional chemostratigraphy places the C-13-depleted cements at the equivalent of the earliest Ediacaran O-17-depletion episode, thus confining the timing of this peak in sulfate concentrations within similar to 50 ky since the onset of the deglaciation. The dearth of similarly C-13-depleted cements in other Proterozoic successions implies that the earliest Ediacaran peak in marine sulfate concentration is a regional and likely transient event.

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