posted on 2018-04-19, 08:19authored byR. Guilbaud, B. J. Slater, S. W. Poulton, T. H. P. Harvey, J. J. Brocks, B. J. Nettersheim, N. J. Butterfield
The relationship between the evolution of early animal communities and oceanic oxygen levels remains unclear. In particular, uncertainty persists in reconstructions of redox conditions during the pivotal early Cambrian (541-510 million years ago, Ma), where conflicting datasets from deeper marine settings suggest either ocean anoxia or fully oxygenated conditions. By coupling geochemical palaeoredox proxies with a record of organic-walled fossils from exceptionally well-defined successions of the early Cambrian Baltic Basin, we provide evidence for the early establishment of modern-type oxygen minimum zones (OMZs). Both inner- and outer-shelf environments were pervasively oxygenated, whereas mid-depth settings were characterised by spatially oscillating anoxia. As such, conflicting redox signatures recovered from individual sites most likely derive from sampling bias, whereby anoxic conditions represent mid-shelf environments with higher productivity. This picture of a spatially restricted anoxic wedge contrasts with prevailing models of globally stratified oceans, offering a more nuanced and realistic account of the Proterozoic-Phanerozoic ocean transition.
Funding
We are thankful to Linda Wickström (Geological Survey of Sweden), Ursula Toom, Olle Hints and Heikki Bauert (Tallinn University of Technology), and Tõnis Saadre (Estonian Geological Survey) for sampling support, and James Rolfe, Jason Day and Janet Hope for analytical technical support. The authors are thankful to the constructive comments of T. Lyons, C. Scott and an anonymous reviewer. This work was funded by NERC (NE/K005251/1). SWP acknowledges support from a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award.
History
Citation
Geochemical Perspectives Letters, 2018, 6, pp. 33-38
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/School of Geography, Geology and the Environment