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Continental configuration controls ocean oxygenation during the Phanerozoic.

Alexandre PohlAndrew RidgwellRichard G StockeyChristophe ThomazoAndrew KeaneEmmanuelle VenninChristopher R Scotese
Published in: Nature (2022)
The early evolutionary and much of the extinction history of marine animals is thought to be driven by changes in dissolved oxygen concentrations ([O 2 ]) in the ocean 1-3 . In turn, [O 2 ] is widely assumed to be dominated by the geological history of atmospheric oxygen (pO 2 ) 4,5 . Here, by contrast, we show by means of a series of Earth system model experiments how continental rearrangement during the Phanerozoic Eon drives profound variations in ocean oxygenation and induces a fundamental decoupling in time between upper-ocean and benthic [O 2 ]. We further identify the presence of state transitions in the global ocean circulation, which lead to extensive deep-ocean anoxia developing in the early Phanerozoic even under modern pO 2 . Our finding that ocean oxygenation oscillates over stable thousand-year (kyr) periods also provides a causal mechanism that might explain elevated rates of metazoan radiation and extinction during the early Palaeozoic Era 6 . The absence, in our modelling, of any simple correlation between global climate and ocean ventilation, and the occurrence of profound variations in ocean oxygenation independent of atmospheric pO 2 , presents a challenge to the interpretation of marine redox proxies, but also points to a hitherto unrecognized role for continental configuration in the evolution of the biosphere.
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