4.5 Article

CONSTRAINTS ON SURFACE TEMPERATURE 3.4 BILLION YEARS AGO BASED ON TRIPLE OXYGEN ISOTOPES OF CHERTS FROM THE BARBERTON GREENSTONE BELT, SOUTH AFRICA, AND THE PROBLEM OF SAMPLE SELECTION

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE
Volume 320, Issue 9, Pages 790-814

Publisher

AMER JOURNAL SCIENCE
DOI: 10.2475/11.2020.02

Keywords

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Funding

  1. School of Earth, Energy, and Environmental Sciences at Stanford University
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. NASA Exobiology Program [NCC-2-721, NAG5-98421, NNG04GM43G]
  4. Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency
  5. Heising-Simons Foundation
  6. UC President's Postdoctoral Fellowship
  7. Miller Institute Fellowship

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Studies of Earth's surface temperature before 3.0 Ga have focused heavily on the oxygen isotopic composition of silica-rich sedimentary rocks called cherts. Interpretation of the results have suggested early surface temperatures ranging from as high as 70 +/- 15 degrees C down to those that differ little from modern values. A major controversy centers on whether differences in the oxygen isotopic compositions of cherts over time reflect changing surface temperatures, changing ocean isotopic composition, or post-depositional diagenetic and metamorphic effects. We here present results of triple oxygen measurements of 3.472 Ga to 3.239 Ga cherts from the Barberton Greenstone Belt, South Africa. The best preserved samples based on geological evidence have Delta'O-17 and delta'O-18 values that plot generally on or near the equilibrium fractionation line for silica precipitated out of modern, ice-free sea water. Geologic considerations allow many potentially useful samples to be eliminated for paleotemperature analysis because of proximity to younger mafic intrusions or interactions with meteoric waters during deposition, both of which tend to lower preserved isotopic values. Our results of triple-O isotopic analyses of a suite of samples representing deposition under open marine, shallow shelf conditions suggest that Archean surface temperatures were well above those of the present day, perhaps as high as 66 to 76 degrees C. They demonstrate that geologic context, including depositional setting and post-depositional history, requires careful assessment before the significance of oxygen isotopic results can be evaluated.

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