RESUMO
The Ediacaran to Cambrian period is generally considered to be the vital transition in the history of marine redox environment and life evolution on earth. The ocean oxygenation levels during this transition period are still debated. Since iron is widely involved in biogeochemical cycles and undergoes redox cycling both in the seawater and sediments, it has become a significant proxy to reconstruct paleo-marine environment. In order to constrain the paleo-marine redox state in the early Cambrian, the iron isotope composition of bulk rock (δ56FeT) is interpreted combining with iron-speciation, redox sensitive elements and pyrite sulfur isotope (δ34Spy) of Yuertusi Formation in Tarim Block. The δ56FeT values varies from -0.39 to 0.48 , with an average of 0.07 , mainly controlled by pyrite mineral facies in this study. Based on the mechanism of pyrite generation in different redox condition, it is proposed that the marine environment of the lower Cambrian in the Tarim basin is dominated by anoxic with intermittent euxinic state. The dynamic evolution of redox environment can be divided into three intervals. The gradual decrease of δ56Fe in Interval I indicates the paleo-marine environment changed from anoxic ferruginous to euxinic, and the paleo-marine sulfate reservoir decreased to a limited level, which might be attributed to abundant burial of organic matter and pyrite. For Interval II, δ56Fe values first increase to evident positive because of partial oxidization then decreased to that of seawater (about 0 ) due to complete oxidization. In Interval III, the continuous decrease of δ56Fe values infers a sustaining oxidization. In summary, the paleo-marine environment of the lower Cambrian Yuertusi Formation evolved from anoxic ferruginous to euxinic and then oxidized continuous. Iron isotope statistics from geological historical periods indicate that seawater was relatively oxidized after the NOE event but did not reach the oxidation levels of present-day seawater.
RESUMO
The objective of this work is to propose a more effective way to prepare an in-house CO2 with known triple oxygen isotope compositions. The major experimental steps include: (1) the O2 is combusted to CO2 on a graphite rod at 750 °C with Pt-catalyst for 3-4 min; and (2) converted CO2 is subsequently purified by two cryogenic traps. The results show high reproducibility of δ13C and δ18O values of the converted CO2 within 0.010-0.020 and 0.006-0.010 (1σ, SD), and the identical δ18O value within error with that of the original O2. Additionally, we have measured the triple oxygen isotope compositions of converted CO2 using an O2-CO2 Pt-catalyzed oxygen-isotope equilibration method. The measured δ17O values of CO2 show high reproducibility within 0.006 (1σ, SD), and are identical within error with the original O2 as well. Notably, our experiments also found that the O2 with heavier oxygen isotope ratios (δ18O > 40 , VSMOW) might have a lesser conversion efficiency, and this effect, combined with the lighter isotope preferential fractionations during the reaction processes of O2 to CO and CO to CO2, may explain the observed lower 17O/16O and 18O/16O ratios of the converted CO2 relative to the original O2.
Assuntos
Dióxido de Carbono , Espectrometria de Massas , Isótopos de Oxigênio , Reprodutibilidade dos TestesRESUMO
Madagascar and the Mascarene Islands of Mauritius and Rodrigues underwent catastrophic ecological and landscape transformations, which virtually eliminated their entire endemic vertebrate megafauna during the past millennium. These ecosystem changes have been alternately attributed to either human activities, climate change, or both, but parsing their relative importance, particularly in the case of Madagascar, has proven difficult. Here, we present a multimillennial (approximately the past 8000 years) reconstruction of the southwest Indian Ocean hydroclimate variability using speleothems from the island of Rodrigues, located â¼1600 km east of Madagascar. The record shows a recurring pattern of hydroclimate variability characterized by submillennial-scale drying trends, which were punctuated by decadal-to-multidecadal megadroughts, including during the late Holocene. Our data imply that the megafauna of the Mascarenes and Madagascar were resilient, enduring repeated past episodes of severe climate stress, but collapsed when a major increase in human activity occurred in the context of a prominent drying trend.