Global Marine Redox Evolution From The Late Neoproterozoic To The Early Paleozoic Constrained By The Integration Of Mo And U Isotope Records

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS(2021)

Cited 46|Views6
No score
Abstract
The emergence and diversification of early animals is commonly thought to have coincided with atmosphere and ocean oxygenation across the terminal Neoproterozoic and early Paleozoic, during which oxygen levels on Earth's surface were sufficient to support the metabolism of early multicellular metazoans in the ocean. Although surface oxygen levels are likely to have broadly risen through the Paleozoic, ocean oxygenation levels during this period are still disputed and poorly constrained. While the community is actively developing high time-resolution records of redox proxies in marine sediments, uncertainties remain about how these records can be used to reconstruct the global marine redox landscape. In this review, we compile newly published molybdenum and uranium isotope data from the late Neoproterozoic to the early Paleozoic (ca. 680-480 Ma) to provide an updated look at the secular changes in global ocean redox state and the potential drivers of these shifts. Integrations of Mo and U isotope records suggest a gradual transition from a pervasive anoxic condition to a highly dynamic condition for global marine redox state from the late Neoproterozoic to the Cambrian. We further concentrate on the marine redox landscape of early Cambrian, by comparing the carbon, sulfur, nitrogen and uranium isotope records and reproducing the variations in carbon-sulfur-uranium isotope records with biogeochemical box models. Changes in marine primary productivity under a relatively low atmospheric oxygen level, are proposed to play a first-order control on the early Cambrian ocean redox dynamics.
More
Translated text
Key words
molybdenum-uranium isotope, marine redox state, primary productivity, late Neoproterozoic, Cambrian explosion
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined