4.7 Article

Iron-oxidizing microbial ecosystems thrived in late Paleoproterozoic redox-stratified oceans

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 286, Issue 1-2, Pages 230-242

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2009.06.033

Keywords

iron-bacteria; iron-formations; Fe-isotopes; rare earth elements; Paleoproterozoic; stromatolites

Funding

  1. WHOI Summer Student Fellowship
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  3. Lawrence University Excellence in Science Fund
  4. NSF [EAR-05-45484]
  5. NASA Astrobiology Institute [NNA04CC09A]
  6. NSERC

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We conducted a geochemical and petrographic study of the 1.89 billion year old Gunflint and Biwabik iron formations, with the goal of determining the importance of microbial iron-oxidation in the formation of iron- and microfossil-rich stromatolites. We used redox-sensitive tracers, such as iron isotopes and rare earth elements, to decipher whether these ancient microbial ecosystems harbored cyanobacteria or Fe-oxidizing bacteria as primary producers. Iron-rich stromatolites contain non-significant or positive Ce anomalies, which contrast with shallow water deposits having negative Ce anomalies. This trend in Ce anomalies indicates that the stromatolites formed in low oxygen conditions, which is the ideal setting for the proliferation of Fe-oxidizing bacterial ecosystems. The stromatolites yield a large range of delta Fe-56 values, from -0.66 to +0.82 parts per thousand, but contain predominantly positive values indicating the prevalence of partial Fe-oxidation. Based on modem analogues. Fe-oxides precipitated in cyanobacterial mats are expected to record an isotopic signature of quantitative oxidation, which in marine settings will yield negative delta Fe-56 values. The stromatolite iron isotope data, therefore, provide evidence for the presence of Fe-oxidizing bacteria. The stromatolites can be traced for a distance of over 100 km in these iron formations, indicating that they record a pervasive rather than localized ecosystem. Their preservation in late Paleoproterozoic successions deposited along the margins of the Superior craton suggests that there was a global expansion of iron-oxidizing bacterial communities at shallow-water redox boundaries in late Paleoproterozoic oceans. (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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