Evolution of Atmospheric O-2 Through the Phanerozoic, Revisited

ANNUAL REVIEW OF EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCES(2023)

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摘要
An oxygen-rich atmosphere is essential for complex animals.The early Earth had an anoxic atmosphere, and understanding the rise and maintenance of high O-2 levels is critical for investigating what drove our own evolution and for assessing the likely habitability of exoplanets. A growing number of techniques aim to reproduce changes in O-2 levels over the Phanerozoic Eon (the past 539 million years).We assess these methods and attempt to draw the reliable techniques together to form a consensus Phanerozoic O-2 curve. We conclude that O-2 probably made up around 5-10% of the atmosphere during the Cambrian and rose in pulses to similar to 15-20% in the Devonian, reaching a further peak of greater than 25% in the Permo-Carboniferous before declining toward the present day. Evolutionary radiations in the Cambrian and Ordovician appear consistent with an oxygen driver, and the Devonian "Age of the Fishes" coincides with oxygen rising above 15% atm.
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oxygen, Phanerozoic, carbon cycle, geochemistry, evolution, animals
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