학술논문

Strongly peraluminous granites provide independent evidence for an increase in biomass burial across the Precambrian-Phanerozoic boundary
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 52(1):87-91
Subject
05A|Petrology - igneous and metamorphic rocks
algae
atmosphere
biomass
biosphere
burial
carbon
eukaryotes
granites
igneous rocks
nitrogen
organic carbon
organic compounds
partial melting
peraluminous composition
Phanerozoic
phosphorus
plutonic rocks
Precambrian
siliciclastics
total organic carbon
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
Strongly peraluminous granites (SPGs) are generated by the partial melting of sedimentary rocks and can thus provide a novel archive to reveal secular trends in Earth's environmental history that integrate siliciclastic sedimentary lithologies. The nitrogen (N) content of Archean, Proterozoic, and Phanerozoic SPGs reveals a systematic increase across the Precambrian-Phanerozoic boundary. This rise is supported by a coeval increase in the phosphorus (P) contents of SPGs. Collectively, these data are most parsimoniously explained by an absolute increase in biomass burial in the late Proterozoic or early Phanerozoic by a factor of ∼5 and as much as 8. The Precambrian-Phanerozoic transition was a time of progressive oxygenation of surface environments paired with major biological innovations, including the rise of eukaryotic algae to ecological dominance. Because oxygenation suppresses biomass preservation in sediments, the increase in net biomass burial preserved in SPGs reveals an expansion of the biosphere and an increase in primary production across this interval.