4.8 Article

The evolution of the marine carbonate factory

Journal

NATURE
Volume 615, Issue 7951, Pages 265-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05654-5

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Calcium carbonate formation is crucial for carbon cycling, and the precipitation of carbonate minerals shapes marine biogeochemical cycling. There is a lack of consensus on how the marine carbonate factory has changed over time. Stable strontium isotopes provide new insights, suggesting that alternative processes like porewater production of authigenic carbonates may have played a significant role in the past. The rise of the skeletal carbonate factory also decreased seawater carbonate saturation states.
Calcium carbonate formation is the primary pathway by which carbon is returned from the ocean-atmosphere system to the solid Earth(1,2). The removal of dissolved inorganic carbon from seawater by precipitation of carbonate minerals-the marine carbonate factory-plays a critical role in shaping marine biogeochemical cycling(1,2). A paucity of empirical constraints has led to widely divergent views on how the marine carbonate factory has changed over time(3-5). Here we use geochemical insights from stable strontium isotopes to provide a new perspective on the evolution of the marine carbonate factory and carbonate mineral saturation states. Although the production of carbonates in the surface ocean and in shallow seafloor settings have been widely considered the predominant carbonate sinks for most of the history of the Earth(6), we propose that alternative processes-such as porewater production of authigenic carbonates-may have represented a major carbonate sink throughout the Precambrian. Our results also suggest that the rise of the skeletal carbonate factory decreased seawater carbonate saturation states.

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