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Extensive marine anoxia during the terminal Ediacaran Period
Author(s) -
Feifei Zhang,
Shuhai Xiao,
Brian Kendall,
Stephen J. Romaniello,
Huan Cui,
Michael Meyer,
Geoffrey J. Gilleaudeau,
Alan J. Kaufman,
Ariel D. Anbar
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aan8983
Subject(s) - biota , period (music) , anoxic waters , seafloor spreading , geology , oceanography , paleontology , sedimentary rock , ecology , biology , physics , acoustics
The terminal Ediacaran Period witnessed the decline of the Ediacara biota (which may have included many stem-group animals). To test whether oceanic anoxia might have played a role in this evolutionary event, we measured U isotope compositions (δU) in sedimentary carbonates from the Dengying Formation of South China to obtain new constraints on the extent of global redox change during the terminal Ediacaran. We found the most negative carbonate δU values yet reported (-0.95 per mil), which were reproduced in two widely spaced coeval sections spanning the terminal Ediacaran Period (551 to 541 million years ago). Mass balance modeling indicates an episode of extensive oceanic anoxia, during which anoxia covered >21% of the seafloor and most U entering the oceans was removed into sediments below anoxic waters. The results suggest that an expansion of oceanic anoxia and temporal-spatial redox heterogeneity, independent of other environmental and ecological factors, may have contributed to the decline of the Ediacara biota and may have also stimulated animal motility.

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