The weathering of organic carbon and pyrite sulfur in Earth's crust and its importance for regulating atmospheric composition, seawater chemistry, and stable isotope records
Abstract
Earth's crust stores extremely large reservoirs of organic carbon and pyrite sulfur, and transient or secular changes in the sizes of these reservoirs have the capacity to dramatically alter atmospheric composition, climate, seawater acid-base chemistry, and the propagation of isotopic signals into the geologic record. This talk will present and discuss new quantitative approaches toward better understanding the factors that control organic carbon and pyrite sulfur weathering under a wide range of Earth surface conditions, as well as their downstream effects on seawater chemistry, stability of atmospheric pO2, and conventional interpretations of stable carbon isotope mass balance during pivotal events in Earth's biogeochemical evolution. In particular, we will focus on (1) development of a weathering-driven scaling between atmospheric pO2 and geologic carbon isotope signals that explains the relative stability of marine δ13C through time and provides a mechanism for protracted negative δ13C excursions during transient increases in atmospheric pO2; (2) experimental and theoretical approaches aimed at better understanding the role of pyrite sulfur weathering in stabilizing atmospheric pO2; and (3) the importance of redox balance in the sedimentary rock cycle for controlling the marine carbonate system and atmospheric pCO2.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFM.V13B2848R
- Keywords:
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- 1030 Geochemical cycles;
- GEOCHEMISTRYDE: 1039 Alteration and weathering processes;
- GEOCHEMISTRYDE: 4924 Geochemical tracers;
- PALEOCEANOGRAPHYDE: 8408 Volcano/climate interactions;
- VOLCANOLOGY