4.5 Article

Marine Redox Conditions in the Early Cambrian Ocean: Insights from the Lower Cambrian Phosphorite Deposits, South China

Journal

JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 282-296

Publisher

CHINA UNIV GEOSCIENCES, WUHAN
DOI: 10.1007/s12583-016-0687-3

Keywords

Early Cambrian; redox-stratified ocean; southern China; iron isotope; phosphorite

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China [2014CB440906]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41273024, 41573011]
  3. Youth Innovation Promotion Association CAS, West Light of CAS
  4. 12th Five-Year Plan project of the State Key Laboratory of Ore Deposit Geochemistry, CAS [SKLODG-ZY125-07]
  5. MLR Public Benefit Research Foundation [201411044]
  6. China Geological Survey Foundation [1212011120354]

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It is generally considered that a significant change in oceanic redox conditions occurred during the Ediacaran Cambrian transition. However, there are currently two major conflicting views on the degree of oxygenation of deep water (oxic vs. ferruginous) during this interval. To date, the oxygenation conditions of the Early Cambrian ocean have not been well constrained. The oxygenation magnitude and mechanism of the Early Cambrian ocean could be critical to the significant biological evolution of the Cambrian Explosion. To constrain the Early Cambrian oceanic redox environment, we conducted an integrated study on iron and sulfur isotopes and redox-sensitive elements (Mo, U, and V) of Lower Cambrian phosphorite deposits from two shallow sections (Meishucun and Gezhongwu) and a deeper water section (Zunyi) from the Yangtze Platform, South China. The near zero delta Fe-56 values from the two shallow sections studied here reflect oxic conditions in the lower phosphorite deposition. An obvious positive shift in delta Fe-56 and redox-sensitive element content was observed in the middle parts of the two shallow water sections, which might reflect loss of light iron by dissimilatory iron reduction during early diagenesis under suboxic shallow water in the platform. However, the highly positive delta Fe-56 values in the deep section could reflect a lower oxidation degree of dissolved Fe(H) under anoxic deep water. The data suggest redox-stratified oceanic conditions during the Early Cambrian, in which completely oxygenated shallow water (platform) coexisted with anoxic deep water (slope). We propose that prolonged upwelling of dissolved organic carbon (DOC)-, Fe(II)- and phosphorus-rich anoxic deep water in a redox-stratified ocean could have increased exchange with the open ocean, resulting in major phosphorite deposition in oxic-suboxic conditions. The progressive oxygenation of the ocean may have facilitated the Early Cambrian biotic diversification.

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