4.7 Article

Organic carbon isotope constraints on the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) reservoir at the Cryogenian-Ediacaran transition

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 299, Issue 1-2, Pages 159-168

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2010.08.031

Keywords

organic carbon isotopes; dissolved organic carbon reservoir; Ediacaran; ocean oxidation; cap carbonates; South China

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR-0745825, EAR-0745827]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40621002]
  3. Education Ministry of China [IRT0546]
  4. Directorate For Geosciences
  5. Division Of Earth Sciences [0745825, 0745827] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Prominent negative carbonate carbon isotope (delta(13)C(carb)) anomalies from some Ediacaran successions are accompanied by invariant or decoupled organic carbon isotope (delta(13)C(org)) values and have been interpreted as resulting from the remineralization of a large dissolved organic carbon (DOC) reservoir capable of buffering carbon isotopes of organic matter. This inferred oceanic DOC reservoir was thought to have initiated with the onset of Cryogenian glaciations (ca. 720 Ma) and lasted for millions of years until the late Ediacaran Period (<560 Ma). Carbon isotope analyses of the basal Doushantuo Formation (ca. 635 Ma) in south China reveal that (1) the cap carbonate has delta(13)C(org) around -26 parts per thousand (VPDB) and relatively low Delta delta(13)C (22 +/- 2 parts per thousand) and (2) the overlying organic-rich black shale and shaly dolostone have more negative delta(13)C(org) (-28 parts per thousand to -35 parts per thousand) and higher Delta delta(13)C (28 parts per thousand-30 parts per thousand). Both delta(13)C(carb) and delta(13)C(org) show a + 6 parts per thousand shift within a 4-m-thick interval overlying the Doushantuo cap carbonate. The delta(13)C(org) values of the cap carbonate are associated with low TOC (mostly<0.1%); their paleoceanographic significance requires further tests in other Ediacaran basins. The co-varying positive shift in delta(13)C(carb) and delta(13)C(org) following cap carbonate deposition is best interpreted as resulting from a rapid increase in organic carbon burial, which may have resulted in the rise of oxygen and heralded the first appearance of animals a few meters above the Doushantuo cap carbonate. The data suggest that a large oceanic DOC reservoir did not exist in the early Ediacaran ocean. Excess oceanic DOC required to explain the Ediacaran Shuram and upper Doushantuo delta(13)C excursions, if it existed, had to be developed during the Ediacaran Period after cap carbonate deposition. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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