Evolution of iron and oxygen biogeochemical cycles during the Precambrian

Author:

Watanabe Yasuto1ORCID,Tajika Eiichi1,Ozaki Kazumi234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Tokyo Institute of Technology Tokyo Japan

3. Earth‐Life Science Institute Tokyo Institute of Technology Tokyo Japan

4. Alternative Earths Team, Interdisciplinary Consortia for Astrobiology Research, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Riverside California USA

Abstract

AbstractIron (Fe) is an essential element for life, and its geochemical cycle is intimately linked to the coupled history of life and Earth's environment. The accumulated geologic records indicate that ferruginous waters existed in the Precambrian oceans not only before the first major rise of atmospheric O2 levels (Great Oxidation Event; GOE) during the Paleoproterozoic, but also during the rest of the Proterozoic. However, the interactive evolution of the biogeochemical cycles of O2 and Fe during the Archean–Proterozoic remains ambiguous. Here, we develop a biogeochemical model to investigate the coupled biogeochemical evolution of Fe–O2–P–C cycles across the GOE. Our model demonstrates that the marine Fe cycle was less sensitive to changes in the production rate of O2 before the GOE (atmospheric pO2 < 10−6 PAL; present atmospheric level). When the P supply rate to the ocean exceeds a certain threshold, the GOE occurs and atmospheric pO2 rises to ~10−3–10−1 PAL. After the GOE, the marine Fe(II) concentration is highly sensitive to atmospheric pO2, suggesting that the marine redox landscape during the Proterozoic may have fluctuated between ferruginous conditions and anoxic non‐ferruginous conditions with sulfidic water masses around continental margins. At a certain threshold value of atmospheric pO2 of ~0.3% PAL, the primary oxidation pathway of Fe(II) shifts from the activity of Fe(II)‐utilizing anoxygenic photoautotrophs in sunlit surface waters to abiotic process in the deep ocean. This is accompanied by a shift in the primary deposition site of Fe(III) hydroxides from the surface ocean to the deep sea, providing a plausible mechanistic explanation for the observed cessation of iron formations during the Proterozoic.

Funder

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Mitsubishi Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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