Triple oxygen isotope evidence for limited mid-Proterozoic primary productivity

被引:0
|
作者
Peter W. Crockford
Justin A. Hayles
Huiming Bao
Noah J. Planavsky
Andrey Bekker
Philip W. Fralick
Galen P. Halverson
Thi Hao Bui
Yongbo Peng
Boswell A. Wing
机构
[1] McGill University,
[2] Montreal,undefined
[3] Weizmann Institute of Science,undefined
[4] Princeton University,undefined
[5] Rice University,undefined
[6] Louisiana State University,undefined
[7] School of Earth & Space Sciences,undefined
[8] Peking University,undefined
[9] Yale University,undefined
[10] University of California Riverside,undefined
[11] Lakehead University,undefined
[12] Thunder Bay,undefined
[13] University of Colorado Boulder,undefined
来源
Nature | 2018年 / 559卷
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摘要
The global biosphere is commonly assumed to have been less productive before the rise of complex eukaryotic ecosystems than it is today1. However, direct evidence for this assertion is lacking. Here we present triple oxygen isotope measurements (∆17O) from sedimentary sulfates from the Sibley basin (Ontario, Canada) dated to about 1.4 billion years ago, which provide evidence for a less productive biosphere in the middle of the Proterozoic eon. We report what are, to our knowledge, the most-negative ∆17O values (down to −0.88‰) observed in sulfates, except for those from the terminal Cryogenian period2. This observation demonstrates that the mid-Proterozoic atmosphere was distinct from what persisted over approximately the past 0.5 billion years, directly reflecting a unique interplay among the atmospheric partial pressures of CO2 and O2 and the photosynthetic O2 flux at this time3. Oxygenic gross primary productivity is stoichiometrically related to the photosynthetic O2 flux to the atmosphere. Under current estimates of mid-Proterozoic atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 (2–30 times that of pre-anthropogenic levels), our modelling indicates that gross primary productivity was between about 6% and 41% of pre-anthropogenic levels if atmospheric O2 was between 0.1–1% or 1–10% of pre-anthropogenic levels, respectively. When compared to estimates of Archaean4–6 and Phanerozoic primary production7, these model solutions show that an increasingly more productive biosphere accompanied the broad secular pattern of increasing atmospheric O2 over geologic time8.
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页码:613 / 616
页数:3
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