The majority of the deep ocean was likely under ferruginous conditions during the first four billion years of Earth’s history. As the atmosphere was gradually oxygenated, the sources, sinks, redox cycling, and reservoir size of dissolved iron in the deep ocean are likely to have changed dramatically. Whether deep water was thoroughly oxygenated by the time of the Ediacaran-Cambrian transition, and the relationship of this oxygenation to the Cambrian explosion, remains debated.
To explore the degree of oceanic oxygenation and its effect on Cambrian explosion, a research team, composed of Dr. XIANG Lei, Prof. ZHANG Hua and Prof. CAO Changqun from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and collaborators from the University of West Carolina, the University of Science and Technology of China and Nanjing University, measured the iron isotopic composition (δ56Fe) of bulk rock (i.e., cherts and mudstones/shales) through the Piyuancun and Hetang formations, using samples collected from the Chunye-1 core, on the Lower Yangtze Block in western Zhejiang. The limited variation in δ56Fe values (<0.7‰) and low FeT/Al ratios (<0.77) in euxinic samples show that the deep-water Fe2+ reservoir was quite limited, and likely similar to that of the modern ocean, during the latest Ediacaran and Cambrian Stages 1-3.
Iron isotope results, combined with published data from sections on the Middle and Upper Yangtze Block, record a general decline in seawater δ56Fe values from >0.55‰ during the end-Ediacaran and Cambrian Stages 1-3 to <0‰ during Cambrian Stage 4. Seawater δ56Fe values in the lower and middle Hetang Formation range between 0 and 0.2‰, suggesting that the riverine dissolved and suspended flux and/or aeolian dust was the predominant source of highly reactive iron to the deep basin. Positive deep-water δ56Fe values, above 0.55‰ during the terminal Ediacaran and Cambrian Stages 1-3, likely reflect a basin where pyritization, rather than oxidation, was the predominant sink for deep-water ferrous Fe. Thus, researchers infer that only the shallow water was sufficiently oxygenated to support complex metazoans and the evolutions of skeletons, and that atmospheric oxygen levels were not high enough to directly oxygenate deep water environments during the Cambrian explosion.The research results have been published online in the international geology journal Chemical Geology. And this research was supported by by the Strategic Priority Research Program (B) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the National Natural Science Foundation of China.
Reference: Xiang, L., Schoepfer, S.D., Zhang, H., Chen, Z.W., Cao, C.Q., Shen, S.Z., 2020. Deep-water dissolved iron cycling and reservoir size across the Ediacaran-Cambrian transition. Chemical Geology, 541: 119575. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119575
Iron isotope and iron composition data in Chunye 1 core
Download: