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Identifying global vs. basinal controls on Paleoproterozoic organic carbon and sulfur isotope records

期刊

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
卷 207, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2020.103230

关键词

Paleoproterozoic; Sulfur cycle; Carbon cycle; Ocean redox; Great Oxidation Event; Onega Basin

资金

  1. Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence funding scheme [223259]
  2. Natural Environment Council [NE/J023485/2]
  3. Estonian Science Agency [PRG447]
  4. Estonian Center of Analytical Chemistry
  5. European Regional Development Fund
  6. programme Mobilitas Pluss grant [MOBJD542]
  7. state assignment of IG KarRC RAS

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Paleoproterozoic sedimentary successions are important archives of the redox evolution of Earth's atmosphere and oceans. Efforts to unravel the dynamics of our planet's early oxygenation from this archive rely on various geochemical proxies, including stable carbon and sulfur isotopes. However, ancient metasedimentary rocks often experienced early- and late-stage (bio)geochemical processes making it difficult to discern primary environmental signals from bulk-rock delta C-13(org) and delta S-34 values. Such complexity in carbon and sulfur isotope systematics contributes to uncertainty about the redox structure of Paleoproterozoic oceans. A currently popular idea is that, following the Great Oxidation Event, global changes led to low-oxygen environments and temporally fluctuating ocean redox conditions that lasted until the Neoproterozoic. The volcano-sedimentary rocks of the Onega Basin have figured prominently in this concept, particularly the exceptionally organic-rich rocks of the 1.98 Ga Zaonega Formation. However, a growing body of evidence shows that local depositional processes acted to form the delta(13)Corg and pyrite delta S-34 records of the Zaonega Formation, thus calling for careful assessment of the global significance of these isotope records. Placing new and existing organic carbon and sulfur isotope data from the Zaonega Formation into the context of basin history and by comparing those results with key Paleoproterozoic successions of the Francevillian Basin (Gabon), the Pechenga Greenstone Belt (NW Russia) and the Animikie Basin (Canada), we show that the stratigraphic delta C-13(org) and pyrite delta S-34 trends can be explained by local perturbations in biogeochemical carbon and sulfur cycling without requiring global drivers. Despite their temporal disparity, we also demonstrate that individual successions share certain geological traits (e.g. magmatic and/or tectonic activity, hydrocarbon generation, basin restriction) suggesting that their pyrite delta S-34 and delta C-13(org) trends were governed by common underlying mechanisms (e.g. similar basinal evolution and biogeochemical feed-backs) and are not necessarily unique to certain time intervals. We further show that pyrites in these successions that are most likely to capture ambient seawater sulfate isotopic composition have consistent delta S-34 values of 15-18 parts per thousand, which hints at remarkable stability in the marine sulfur cycle over most of the Paleoproterozoic Era.

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