Late Paleozoic oxygenation of marine environments supported by dolomite U-Pb dating.
Michal Ben-IsraelRobert M HolderLyle L NelsonEmily F SmithAndrew R C Kylander-ClarkUri RybPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Understanding causal relationships between evolution and ocean oxygenation hinges on reliable reconstructions of marine oxygen levels, typically from redox-sensitive geochemical proxies. Here, we develop a proxy, using dolomite U-Pb geochronology, to reconstruct seawater U/Pb ratios. Dolomite samples consistently give U-Pb dates and initial 207 Pb/ 206 Pb ratios lower than expected from their stratigraphic ages. These observations are explained by resetting of the U-Pb system long after deposition; the magnitude of deviations from expected initial 207 Pb/ 206 Pb are a function of the redox-sensitive U/Pb ratios during deposition. Reconstructed initial U/Pb ratios increased notably in the late-Paleozoic, reflecting an increase in oxygenation of marine environments at that time. This timeline is consistent with documented shifts in some other redox proxies and supports evolution-driven mechanisms for the oxygenation of late-Paleozoic marine environments, as well as suggestions that early animals thrived in oceans that on long time scales were oxygen-limited compared to today.