| Literature DB >> 26597559 |
Chao Li1, Noah J Planavsky2, Wei Shi1, Zihu Zhang1, Chuanming Zhou3, Meng Cheng1, Lidya G Tarhan2, Genming Luo1, Shucheng Xie1.
Abstract
Oxygenation has widely been viewed as a major factor driving the emergence and diversification of animals. However, links between early animal evolution and shifts in surface oxygen levels have largely been limited to extrapolation of paleoredox conditions reconstructed from unfossiliferous strata to settings in which contemporaneous fossils were preserved. Herein, we present a multi-proxy paleoredox study of late Ediacaran (ca. 560-551 Ma) shales hosting the Miaohe Konservat-Lagerstätte of South China and, for comparison, equivalent non-fossil-bearing shales at adjacent sections. For the fossiliferous strata at Miaohe there is geochemical evidence for anoxic conditions, but paleontological evidence for at least episodically oxic conditions. An oxygen-stressed environment is consistent with the low diversity and simple morphology of Miaohe Biota macrofossils. However, there is no evidence for euxinic (anoxic and sulphidic) conditions for the fossiliferous strata at Miaohe, in contrast to adjacent unfossiliferous sections. Our results indicate that Ediacaran marine redox chemistry was highly heterogeneous, even at the kilometre-scale. Therefore, our study provides direct-rather than inferred-evidence that anoxia played a role in shaping a landmark Ediacaran ecosystem. If the anoxic conditions characteristic of the studied sections were widespread in the late Neoproterozoic, environmental stress would have hindered the development of complex ecosystems.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26597559 PMCID: PMC4656985 DOI: 10.1038/srep17097
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Geological context of studied sections.
(a) The tectonic setting of South China in the Neoproterozoic. This map was made by Adobe Illustrator CS5. (b) Paleogeographic reconstruction of the Yangtze platform during deposition of the middle and upper Doushantuo Formation and the locations of the three sections included or discussed in this study. Modified from ref. 55 (DOI:10.1016/j.epsl.2007.07.009).
Figure 2Composite stratigraphy with trace metal and iron speciation data that provide information on spatial and temporal variability in ocean chemistry concurrent with deposition of uppermost black shales and siliceous shales of the Doushantuo Formation.
The interval in which the Miaohe Biota fossils are preserved is marked at the Miaohe section based on sample fossil examination and descriptions in ref. 11. The vertical dashed lines (from left to right) for each section indicates key values of 0.0202 (Cr/Ti), 7.9 (V/Sc), 0.38 (FeHR/FeT), 0.7 (Fepy/FeHR), 0.5 (wt.%, FeT) and 2 (ppm, Mo) used for geochemical analysis (see text). Data sources: (1) trace metal and Fe speciation data: Miaohe and Jiuqunao sections - this study and Jiulongwan section – ref. 9. (2) The chronological dating data marked at the Jiulongwan and Jiuqunao sections: 591.1 ± 5.3 Ma – ref. 21 and 551.1 ± 0.7 Ma – ref. 22.
The size statistics of pyrite framboids in the uppermost shales of the Doushantuo Formation at the Miaohe and Jiuqunao sections.
| Sample | Lithology* | Height (m) | Measurements | Mean framboid diameter (μm) | Maximum framboid diameter (μm) | Standard Deviation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miaohe Section | ||||||
| MH-22 | SS | 23 | 128 | 7.52 | 11.30 | 2.04 |
| MH-18 | SS | 18.4 | 172 | 7.53 | 11.85 | 2.29 |
| MH-6 | BS | 5.6 | 184 | 6.56 | 11.15 | 1.83 |
| MH-3 | BS | 4.9 | 608 | 6.05 | 11.3 | 1.86 |
| Jiuqunao Section | ||||||
| JQN-21 | SS | 10.5 | 352 | 7.14 | 10.56 | 2.2 |
| JQN-11 | SS | 7 | 224 | 7.32 | 10.59 | 1.92 |
| JQN-3 | BS | 1.1 | 188 | 6.88 | 10.47 | 1.72 |
| JQN-1 | BS | 0.2 | 180 | 5.53 | 9.18 | 1.40 |
*SS = siliceous shale; BS = black shale.
Figure 3A graphic summary of water mass redox variations of the Doushantuo Formation (IV) among studied sections, as indicated by those integrated Fe and trace metal geochemical data and petrographic data of sedimentary pyrites presented in Fig. 2.
See Fig. 2 caption for sources of chronological data.