Transient fertilization of a post-Sturtian Snowball ocean margin with dissolved phosphate by clay minerals.
Ernest Chi FruJalila Al BahriChristophe BrossonOlabode BankoleJérémie AubineauAbderrazzak El AlbaniAlexandra NederbragtAnthony OldroydAlasdair SkeltonLinda LowhagenDavid WebsterWilson Y FantongBenjamin J W MillsLewis J AlcottKurt O KonhauserTimothy W LyonsPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Marine sedimentary rocks deposited across the Neoproterozoic Cryogenian Snowball interval, ~720-635 million years ago, suggest that post-Snowball fertilization of shallow continental margin seawater with phosphorus accelerated marine primary productivity, ocean-atmosphere oxygenation, and ultimately the rise of animals. However, the mechanisms that sourced and delivered bioavailable phosphate from land to the ocean are not fully understood. Here we demonstrate a causal relationship between clay mineral production by the melting Sturtian Snowball ice sheets and a short-lived increase in seawater phosphate bioavailability by at least 20-fold and oxygenation of an immediate post-Sturtian Snowball ocean margin. Bulk primary sediment inputs and inferred dissolved seawater phosphate dynamics point to a relatively low marine phosphate inventory that limited marine primary productivity and seawater oxygenation before the Sturtian glaciation, and again in the later stages of the succeeding interglacial greenhouse interval.