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Journal ArticleDOI

Enigmatic origin of the largest-known carbon isotope excursion in Earth's history

TLDR
The Shuram excursion as mentioned in this paper is the largest excursion in carbon isotope compositions in Earth history, and it was found to be caused by post-depositional alteration that is global rather than local.
Abstract
Carbonate rocks of Middle Ediacaran age record the largest excursion in carbon isotopic compositions in Earth history. A review of the data offers two intriguing explanations: an extraordinary perturbation of the carbon cycle, or post-depositional alteration that is global, rather than local. Carbonate rocks from the Middle Ediacaran period in locations all over the globe record the largest excursion in carbon isotopic compositions in Earth history. This finding suggests a dramatic reorganization of Earth's carbon cycle. Named the Shuram excursion for its original discovery in the Shuram Formation, Oman, the anomaly closely precedes impressive events in evolution, including the rise of large metazoans and the origin of biomineralization in animals. Instead of a true record of the carbon cycle at the time of sedimentation, the carbon isotope signature recorded in the Shuram excursion could be caused by alteration following deposition of the carbonate sediments, a scenario supported by several geochemical indicators. However, such secondary processes are intrinsically local, which makes it difficult to explain the coincident occurrence of carbon isotope anomalies in numerous records around the globe. Both possibilities are intriguing: if the Shuram excursion preserves a genuine record of ancient seawater chemistry, it reflects a perturbation to the carbon cycle that is stronger than any known perturbations of the modern Earth. If, however, it represents secondary alteration during burial of sediments, then marine sediments must have been globally preconditioned in a unique way, to allow ordinary and local processes to produce an extraordinary and widespread response.

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The rise of oxygen in Earth’s early ocean and atmosphere

TL;DR: The initial increase of O2 in the atmosphere, its delayed build-up in the ocean, its increase to near-modern levels in the sea and air two billion years later, and its cause-and-effect relationship with life are among the most compelling stories in Earth’s history.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Cambrian conundrum: Early divergence and later ecological success in the early history of animals

TL;DR: A compilation of the patterns of fossil and molecular diversification, comparative developmental data, and information on ecological feeding strategies indicate that the major animal clades diverged many tens of millions of years before their first appearance in the fossil record.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Neoproterozoic oxygenation event: Environmental perturbations and biogeochemical cycling

TL;DR: The oxygen content of the Earth's surface environment is thought to have increased in two broad steps: the Great Oxygenation Event (GOE) around the Archean-Proterozoic boundary and the Neoproterogeneic Oxygenations Event (NOE), during which oxygen possibly accumulated to the levels required to support animal life and ventilate the deep oceans as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neoproterozoic glaciations in a revised global palaeogeography from the breakup of Rodinia to the assembly of Gondwanaland

TL;DR: A set of revised global palaeogeographic maps for the 825-540-Ma interval using the latest palaeomagnetic data, along with lithological information for Neoproterozoic sedimentary basins was presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Authigenic Carbonate and the History of the Global Carbon Cycle

TL;DR: This work proposes that authigenic carbonate, produced in sediment pore fluids during early diagenesis, has played a major role in the carbon cycle in the past and presents a framework for interpreting the carbon isotopic composition of sedimentary rocks.
References
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Book

A Geologic time scale

W. B. Harland
Journal ArticleDOI

An early Cenozoic perspective on greenhouse warming and carbon-cycle dynamics

TL;DR: Past episodes of greenhouse warming provide insight into the coupling of climate and the carbon cycle and thus may help to predict the consequences of unabated carbon emissions in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth

TL;DR: Negative carbon isotope anomalies in carbonate rocks bracketing Neoproterozoic glacial deposits in Namibia, combined with estimates of thermal subsidence history, suggest that biological productivity in the surface ocean collapsed for millions of years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chronology, causes and progression of the Messinian salinity crisis

TL;DR: The authors presented an astronomically calibrated chronology for the Mediterranean Messinian age based on an integrated high-resolution stratigraphy and tuning of sedimentary cycle patterns to variations in the Earth's orbital parameters.
Book

The chemical evolution of the atmosphere and oceans

TL;DR: Holland et al. as mentioned in this paper reconstruct the chemical evolution of the Earth's atmosphere and oceans using data from a wide spectrum of fields to trace the history of the ocean-atmosphere system.
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