| Literature DB >> 34262211 |
Boriana Kalderon-Asael1, Joachim A R Katchinoff2, Noah J Planavsky3, Ashleigh V S Hood4, Mathieu Dellinger5, Eric J Bellefroid2, David S Jones6, Axel Hofmann7, Frantz Ossa Ossa7,8, Francis A Macdonald9, Chunjiang Wang10, Terry T Isson2,11, Jack G Murphy12, John A Higgins12, A Joshua West13, Malcolm W Wallace4, Dan Asael2, Philip A E Pogge von Strandmann14,15.
Abstract
The evolution of the global carbon and silicon cycles is thought to have contributed to the long-term stability of Earth's climate1-3. Many questions remain, however, regarding the feedback mechanisms at play, and there are limited quantitative constraints on the sources and sinks of these elements in Earth's surface environments4-12. Here we argue that the lithium-isotope record can be used to track the processes controlling the long-term carbon and silicon cycles. By analysing more than 600 shallow-water marine carbonate samples from more than 100 stratigraphic units, we construct a new carbonate-based lithium-isotope record spanning the past 3 billion years. The data suggest an increase in the carbonate lithium-isotope values over time, which we propose was driven by long-term changes in the lithium-isotopic conditions of sea water, rather than by changes in the sedimentary alterations of older samples. Using a mass-balance modelling approach, we propose that the observed trend in lithium-isotope values reflects a transition from Precambrian carbon and silicon cycles to those characteristic of the modern. We speculate that this transition was linked to a gradual shift to a biologically controlled marine silicon cycle and the evolutionary radiation of land plants13,14.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34262211 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03612-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962