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Two-billion-year-old evaporites capture Earth’s great oxidation

Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14771
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aar2687
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article.pdf (3.326Mb)
Accepted manuscript version (PDF)
Dato
2018-04-20
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Forfatter
Blättler, C.L.; Claire, M.W.; Prave, A.R.; Kirsimäe, K.; Higgins, J.A.; Medvedev, P.V.; Romashkin, A.E; Rychanchik, D.V.; Zerkle, A.L.; Paiste, Kärt; Kreitsmann, T.; Millar, I.L.; Hayles, J.A.; Bao, H.; Turchyn, A.V.; Warke, M.R.; Lepland, Aivo
Sammendrag
Major changes in atmospheric and ocean chemistry occurred in the Paleoproterozoic era (2.5 to 1.6 billion years ago). Increasing oxidation dramatically changed Earth’s surface, but few quantitative constraints exist on this important transition. This study describes the sedimentology, mineralogy, and geochemistry of a 2-billion-year-old, ~800-meter-thick evaporite succession from the Onega Basin in Russian Karelia. The deposit consists of a basal unit dominated by halite (~100 meters) followed by units dominated by anhydrite-magnesite (~500 meters) and dolomite-magnesite (~200 meters). The evaporite minerals robustly constrain marine sulfate concentrations to at least 10 millimoles per kilogram of water, representing an oxidant reservoir equivalent to more than 20% of the modern ocean-atmosphere oxidizing capacity. These results show that substantial amounts of surface oxidant accumulated during this critical transition in Earth’s oxygenation.
Beskrivelse
This is the author’s version of the work. It is posted here by permission of the AAAS for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Science on vol. 360, 20 April 2018, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aar2687.
Forlag
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Sitering
Blättler, C.L., Claire, M.W., Prave, A.R., Kirsimäe, K., Higgins, J.A., Medvedev, P.V., ... Lepland, A. (2018). Two-billion-year-old evaporites capture Earth’s great oxidation. Science, 360(6386), 320-323. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aar2687
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