| Literature DB >> 17901330 |
Ariel D Anbar1, Yun Duan, Timothy W Lyons, Gail L Arnold, Brian Kendall, Robert A Creaser, Alan J Kaufman, Gwyneth W Gordon, Clinton Scott, Jessica Garvin, Roger Buick.
Abstract
High-resolution chemostratigraphy reveals an episode of enrichment of the redox-sensitive transition metals molybdenum and rhenium in the late Archean Mount McRae Shale in Western Australia. Correlations with organic carbon indicate that these metals were derived from contemporaneous seawater. Rhenium/osmium geochronology demonstrates that the enrichment is a primary sedimentary feature dating to 2501 +/- 8 million years ago (Ma). Molybdenum and rhenium were probably supplied to Archean oceans by oxidative weathering of crustal sulfide minerals. These findings point to the presence of small amounts of O2 in the environment more than 50 million years before the start of the Great Oxidation Event.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17901330 DOI: 10.1126/science.1140325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728