학술논문

Oxygenation of the Archean atmosphere; new paleosol constraints from eastern India
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 42(10):923-926
Subject
12|Stratigraphy
03|Geochronology
absolute age
Archean
Asia
atmosphere
chemical ratios
eastern India
geochemistry
India
Indian Peninsula
major elements
metals
nesosilicates
orthosilicates
oxidation
oxygen
paleoatmosphere
paleoenvironment
paleosols
photochemistry
photosynthesis
Precambrian
rare earths
silicates
Singhbhum Granite
trace elements
U/Pb
weathering
zircon
zircon group
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
It is widely believed that atmospheric oxygen saturation rose from -5 present atmospheric level (PAL) in the Archean to >10-2 PAL at the Great Oxidation Event (GOE) at ca. 2.4 Ga, but it is unclear if any earlier oxygenation events occurred. Here we report U-Pb zircon data indicating that a pyrophyllite-bearing paleosol, from Keonjhar in the Precambrian Singhbhum Craton of eastern India, formed between 3.29 and 3.02 Ga, making it one of very few known Archean paleosols globally. Field and geochemical evidence suggests that the upper part of the paleosol was eroded prior to unconformable deposition of an overlying sequence of shallow-marine siliciclastic sediments. A negative cerium anomaly within the currently preserved level of the paleosol indicates that ancient oxidative weathering occurred in the original upper soil profile. The presence of redox-sensitive detrital uraninite and pyrite together with a complete absence of pyrophyllite in the overlying sediments indicate that the mineralogical and geochemical features of the paleosol were established prior to the unconformable deposition of the sediments and are not related to subsequent diagenetic or hydrothermal effects. We suggest that a transient atmospheric oxygenation event occurred at least 600 m.y. prior to the GOE and ∼60 m.y. prior to a previously documented Archean oxygenation event. We propose that several pulsed and short-lived oxygenation events are likely to have occurred prior to the GOE, and that these changes to atmospheric composition arose due to the presence of organisms capable of oxygenic photosynthesis.