Ferruginous Conditions Dominated Later Neoproterozoic Deep-Water Chemistry
Abstract
Earth’s surface chemical environment has evolved from an early anoxic condition to the oxic state we have today. Transitional between an earlier Proterozoic world with widespread deep-water anoxia and a Phanerozoic world with large oxygen-utilizing animals, the Neoproterozoic Era [1000 to 542 million years ago (Ma)] plays a key role in this history. The details of Neoproterozoic Earth surface oxygenation, however, remain unclear. We report that through much of the later Neoproterozoic (<742 ± 6 Ma), anoxia remained widespread beneath the mixed layer of the oceans; deeper water masses were sometimes sulfidic but were mainly Fe2+-enriched. These ferruginous conditions marked a return to ocean chemistry not seen for more than one billion years of Earth history.
- Publication:
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Science
- Pub Date:
- August 2008
- DOI:
- 10.1126/science.1154499
- Bibcode:
- 2008Sci...321..949C
- Keywords:
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- OCEANS