TY - JOUR
T1 - Triple oxygen isotope constraints on atmospheric O2and biological productivity during the mid-Proterozoic
AU - Liu, Peng
AU - Liu, Jingjun
AU - Ji, Aoshuang
AU - Reinhard, Christopher T.
AU - Planavsky, Noah J.
AU - Babikov, Dmitri
AU - Najjar, Raymond G.
AU - Kasting, James F.
N1 - Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. We thank Kristie A. Boering for her contributions during the development phase of this project, especially for guiding the comparison with modern atmospheric data. We also thank Christof Janssen for insightful guidance on the chemical kinetics of ozone isotope formation. P.L. was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants 41888101, 42105043, 42121005 and 91958214) and China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (Grants 2021M690142 and 2021T140629). Funding for this project was also provided by The Pennsylvania State University, the China Scholarship Council, and Yale University.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/12/21
Y1 - 2021/12/21
N2 - Reconstructing the history of biological productivity and atmospheric oxygen partial pressure (pO2) is a fundamental goal of geobiology. Recently, the mass-independent fractionation of oxygen isotopes (O-MIF) has been used as a tool for estimating pO2and productivity during the Proterozoic. O-MIF, reported as δ'17O, is produced during the formation of ozone and destroyed by isotopic exchange with water by biological and chemical processes. Atmospheric O-MIF can be preserved in the geologic record when pyrite (FeS2) is oxidized during weathering, and the sulfur is redeposited as sulfate. Here, sedimentary sulfates from the ~1.4-Ga Sibley Formation are reanalyzed using a detailed one-dimensional photochemical model that includes physical constraints on air-sea gas exchange. Previous analyses of these data concluded that pO2at that time was <1% PAL (times the present atmospheric level). Our model shows that the upper limit on pO2is essentially unconstrained by these data. Indeed, pO2levels below 0.8% PAL are possible only if atmospheric methane was more abundant than today (so that pCO2could have been lower) or if the Sibley O-MIF data were diluted by reprocessing before the sulfates were deposited. Our model also shows that, contrary to previous assertions, marine productivity cannot be reliably constrained by the O-MIF data because the exchange of molecular oxygen (O2) between the atmosphere and surface ocean is controlled more by air-sea gas transfer rates than by biological productivity. Improved estimates of pCO2and/or improved proxies for Δ'17O of atmospheric O2would allow tighter constraints to be placed on mid-Proterozoic pO2.
AB - Reconstructing the history of biological productivity and atmospheric oxygen partial pressure (pO2) is a fundamental goal of geobiology. Recently, the mass-independent fractionation of oxygen isotopes (O-MIF) has been used as a tool for estimating pO2and productivity during the Proterozoic. O-MIF, reported as δ'17O, is produced during the formation of ozone and destroyed by isotopic exchange with water by biological and chemical processes. Atmospheric O-MIF can be preserved in the geologic record when pyrite (FeS2) is oxidized during weathering, and the sulfur is redeposited as sulfate. Here, sedimentary sulfates from the ~1.4-Ga Sibley Formation are reanalyzed using a detailed one-dimensional photochemical model that includes physical constraints on air-sea gas exchange. Previous analyses of these data concluded that pO2at that time was <1% PAL (times the present atmospheric level). Our model shows that the upper limit on pO2is essentially unconstrained by these data. Indeed, pO2levels below 0.8% PAL are possible only if atmospheric methane was more abundant than today (so that pCO2could have been lower) or if the Sibley O-MIF data were diluted by reprocessing before the sulfates were deposited. Our model also shows that, contrary to previous assertions, marine productivity cannot be reliably constrained by the O-MIF data because the exchange of molecular oxygen (O2) between the atmosphere and surface ocean is controlled more by air-sea gas transfer rates than by biological productivity. Improved estimates of pCO2and/or improved proxies for Δ'17O of atmospheric O2would allow tighter constraints to be placed on mid-Proterozoic pO2.
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U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2105074118
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2105074118
M3 - Article
C2 - 34911756
AN - SCOPUS:85122579598
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 118
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 51
M1 - e2105074118
ER -