Login / Signup

Seawater barium and sulfide removal improved marine habitability for the Cambrian Explosion of early animals.

Wei WeiLin-Hui DongShuhai XiaoYi-Bo LinLingang XuGuang-Yi WeiWenzhong WangLan-Lan TianHai-Zhen WeiFang Huang
Published in: National science review (2024)
An increase in atmospheric p O 2 has been proposed as a trigger for the Cambrian Explosion at ∼539-514 Ma but the mechanistic linkage remains unclear. To gain insights into marine habitability for the Cambrian Explosion, we analysed excess Ba contents (Ba excess ) and isotope compositions (δ 138 Ba excess ) of ∼521-Myr-old metalliferous black shales in South China. The δ 138 Ba excess values vary within a large range and show a negative logarithmic correlation with Ba excess , suggesting a major (>99%) drawdown of oceanic Ba inventory via barite precipitation. Spatial variations in Ba excess and δ 138 Ba excess indicate that Ba removal was driven by sulfate availability that was ultimately derived from the upwelling of deep seawaters. Global oceanic oxygenation across the Ediacaran-Cambrian transition may have increased the sulfate reservoir via oxidation of sulfide and concurrently decreased the Ba reservoir by barite precipitation. The removal of both H 2 S and Ba that are deleterious to animals could have improved marine habitability for early animals.
Keyphrases
  • nitric oxide
  • gene expression
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • high resolution
  • air pollution
  • genome wide
  • men who have sex with men
  • liquid chromatography