Methane-carbon budget of a ferruginous meromictic lake and implications for marine methane dynamics on early Earth

Author:

Akam Sajjad A.1ORCID,Chuang Pei-Chuan23,Katsev Sergei4,Wittkop Chad5,Chamberlain Michelle3,Dale Andrew W.2,Wallmann Klaus2,Heathcote Adam J.6,Swanner Elizabeth D.1

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Geological and Atmospheric Sciences, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA

2. 2GEOMAR, Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research, 24148 Kiel, Germany

3. 3Department of Earth Sciences, National Central University, Taoyuan City, Taiwan 320

4. 4Department of Physics, University of Minnesota–Duluth, Duluth, Minnesota 55812, USA

5. 5Department of Biochemistry, Chemistry, and Geology, Minnesota State University, Mankato, Minnesota 56001, USA

6. 6St. Croix Watershed Research Station, Science Museum of Minnesota, Marine on St. Croix, Minnesota 55047, USA

Abstract

Abstract The greenhouse gas methane (CH4) contributed to a warm climate that maintained liquid water and sustained Earth’s habitability in the Precambrian despite the faint young sun. The viability of methanogenesis (ME) in ferruginous environments, however, is debated, as iron reduction can potentially outcompete ME as a pathway of organic carbon remineralization (OCR). Here, we document that ME is a dominant OCR process in Brownie Lake, Minnesota (midwestern United States), which is a ferruginous (iron-rich, sulfate-poor) and meromictic (stratified with permanent anoxic bottom waters) system. We report ME accounting for ≥90% and >9% ± 7% of the anaerobic OCR in the water column and sediments, respectively, and an overall particulate organic carbon loading to CH4 conversion efficiency of ≥18% ± 7% in the anoxic zone of Brownie Lake. Our results, along with previous reports from ferruginous systems, suggest that even under low primary productivity in Precambrian oceans, the efficient conversion of organic carbon would have enabled marine CH4 to play a major role in early Earth’s biogeochemical evolution.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

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