Abstract
The snowball Earth hypothesis—that a runaway ice-albedo feedback can cause global glaciation—seeks to explain low-latitude glacial deposits, as well as geological anomalies including the ...re-emergence of banded iron formation and “cap” carbonates. One of the most significant challenges to snowball Earth has been sedimentological cyclicity that has been taken to imply more climate dynamics than expected when the ocean is completely covered in ice. However, recent climate models suggest that as atmospheric CO
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accumulates, the snowball climate system becomes sensitive to orbital forcing. Here we show the presence of nearly all Milankovitch (orbital) cycles preserved in stratified banded iron formation deposited during the Sturtian snowball Earth. These results provide evidence for orbitally forced cyclicity of global ice sheets that resulted in periodic oxidation of ferrous iron. Orbital glacial advance and retreat cycles provide a simple mechanism to reconcile both the sedimentary dynamics and the enigmatic survival of multicellular life during snowball Earth.
Preservation of organic carbon (OC) in marine sediments exerts a major control on the cycling of carbon in the Earth system. In these marine environments, OC preservation may be enhanced by ...diagenetic reactions in locations where deposition of fragmental volcanic material called tephra occurs. While the mechanisms by which this process occurs are well understood, site‐specific studies of this process are limited. Here, we report a study of sediments from the Bering Sea (IODP Site U1339D) to investigate the effects of marine tephra deposition on carbon cycling during the Pleistocene and Holocene. Our results suggest that tephra layers are loci of OC burial with distinct δ13C values, and that this process is primarily linked to bonding of OC with reactive metals, accounting for ∼80% of all OC within tephra layers. In addition, distribution of reactive metals from the tephra into non‐volcanic sediments above and below the tephra layers enhances OC preservation in these sediments, with ∼33% of OC bound to reactive phases. Importantly, OC‐Fe coupling is evident in sediments >700,000 years old. Thus, these interactions may help explain the observed preservation of OC in ancient marine sediments.
Plain Language Summary
The burial of organic carbon (OC) in marine sediments is one of the major carbon sinks on Earth, meaning that it removes carbon dioxide from the ocean‐atmosphere system. However, the speed at which burial occurs varies across the globe, and is dependent on a range of factors, from the amount of nutrients in the water column, to the type of sediment. Despite evidence suggesting that when tephra is deposited to the seafloor carbon burial is enhanced, very little work has been done to investigate this process. We have therefore analyzed sediments from the Bering Sea, where volcanoes from the Aleutian Islands and Kamchatka regularly deposit tephra in the ocean. We found that OC burial is indeed associated with ash deposition, and importantly, that OC is preserved in the ash layers themselves. We show here that this carbon is preserved effectively because of chemical reactions between the OC and reactive iron, which is released by the ash, creating conditions which preserve carbon for hundreds of thousands of years.
Key Points
Tephra layers are loci of marine organic carbon (OC) burial with distinct carbon isotopic compositions
Preservation primarily linked to association of OC with reactive iron phases, accounting for ∼80% of all OC in tephra layers
OC‐reactive Fe coupling is observed in sediments >700,000 years old, indicating long‐term persistence of these complexes
The Great Unconformity, a profound gap in Earth’s stratigraphic record often evident below the base of the Cambrian system, has remained among the most enigmatic field observations in Earth science ...for over a century. While long associated directly or indirectly with the occurrence of the earliest complex animal fossils, a conclusive explanation for the formation and global extent of the Great Unconformity has remained elusive. Here we show that the Great Unconformity is associated with a set of large global oxygen and hafnium isotope excursions in magmatic zircon that suggest a late Neoproterozoic crustal erosion and sediment subduction event of unprecedented scale. These excursions, the Great Unconformity, preservational irregularities in the terrestrial bolide impact record, and the first-order pattern of Phanerozoic sedimentation can together be explained by spatially heterogeneous Neoproterozoic glacial erosion totaling a global average of 3–5 vertical kilometers, along with the subsequent thermal and isostatic consequences of this erosion for global continental freeboard.
The terrestrial impact crater record is commonly assumed to be biased, with erosion thought to eliminate older craters, even on stable terrains. Given that the same projectile population strikes ...Earth and the Moon, terrestrial selection effects can be quantified by using a method to date lunar craters with diameters greater than 10 kilometers and younger than 1 billion years. We found that the impact rate increased by a factor of 2.6 about 290 million years ago. The terrestrial crater record shows similar results, suggesting that the deficit of large terrestrial craters between 300 million and 650 million years ago relative to more recent times stems from a lower impact flux, not preservation bias. The almost complete absence of terrestrial craters older than 650 million years may indicate a massive global-scale erosion event near that time.
Hole U1395B, drilled southeast of Montserrat during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 340, provides a long (>1 Ma) and detailed record of eruptive and mass‐wasting events (>130 discrete ...events). This record can be used to explore the temporal evolution in volcanic activity and landslides at an arc volcano. Analysis of tephra fall and volcaniclastic turbidite deposits in the drill cores reveals three heightened periods of volcanic activity on the island of Montserrat (∼930 to ∼900 ka, ∼810 to ∼760 ka, and ∼190 to ∼120 ka) that coincide with periods of increased volcano instability and mass‐wasting. The youngest of these periods marks the peak in activity at the Soufrière Hills volcano. The largest flank collapse of this volcano (∼130 ka) occurred toward the end of this period, and two younger landslides also occurred during a period of relatively elevated volcanism. These three landslides represent the only large (>0.3 km3) flank collapses of the Soufrière Hills edifice, and their timing also coincides with periods of rapid sea level rise (>5 m/ka). Available age data from other island arc volcanoes suggest a general correlation between the timing of large landslides and periods of rapid sea level rise, but this is not observed for volcanoes in intraplate ocean settings. We thus infer that rapid sea level rise may modulate the timing of collapse at island arc volcanoes, but not in larger ocean‐island settings.
Key Points
Heightened volcanic activity on Montserrat at 120–190, 760–810, and 900–930 ka
Large landslides coincide with rapid sea level rise at island arc volcanoes
Global ice volume (sea level) and deep‐sea temperature are key measures of Earth's climatic state. We synthesize evidence for multi‐centennial to millennial ice‐volume and deep‐sea temperature ...variations over the past 40 million years, which encompass the early glaciation of Antarctica at ∼34 million years ago (Ma), the end of the Middle Miocene Climate Optimum, and the descent into bipolar glaciation from ∼3.4 Ma. We compare different sea‐level and deep‐water temperature reconstructions to build a resource for validating long‐term numerical model‐based approaches. We present: (a) a new template synthesis of ice‐volume and deep‐sea temperature variations for the past 5.3 million years; (b) an extended template for the interval between 5.3 and 40 Ma; and (c) a discussion of uncertainties and limitations. We highlight key issues associated with glacial state changes in the geological record from 40 Ma to present that require attention in further research. These include offsets between calibration‐sensitive versus thermodynamically guided deep‐sea paleothermometry proxy measurements; a conundrum related to the magnitudes of sea‐level and deep‐sea temperature change at the Eocene‐Oligocene transition at 34 Ma; a discrepancy in deep‐sea temperature levels during the Middle Miocene; and a hitherto unquantified non‐linear reduction of glacial deep‐sea temperatures through the past 3.4 million years toward a near‐freezing deep‐sea temperature asymptote, while sea level stepped down in a more uniform manner. Uncertainties in proxy‐based reconstructions hinder further distinction of “reality” among reconstructions. It seems more promising to further narrow this using three‐dimensional ice‐sheet models with realistic ice‐climate‐ocean‐topography‐lithosphere coupling, as computational capacities improve.
Plain Language Summary
Global ice volume (hence, sea level) and deep‐sea temperature are important measures of Earth's climatic state. To better understand Earth's climate cycles in response to its orbitally driven insolation cycles, we evaluate and synthesize evidence for ice‐volume (sea‐level) and deep‐sea temperature variations at multi‐centennial to millennial resolution throughout the last 40 million years. These last 40 million years encompass the major build‐up of Antarctic glaciation from about 34 million years ago, and development of extensive Northern Hemisphere ice sheets from about 3.4 million years ago. We present a new template synthesis of ice‐volume (sea‐level) and deep‐sea temperature for the past 5.3 million years, with extension through the interval between 5.3 and 40 Ma with wider uncertainties. We also highlight a number of remaining questions about major climate transitions, including the early glaciation history of Antarctica, the end of the so‐called Middle Miocene Climate Optimum from about ∼14.5 Ma, and the descent over the past several million years into conditions with extensive ice‐age maxima in both hemispheres.
Key Points
New synthesis of sea level and deep‐sea temperature over 40 million years, at millennial resolution, across seven different methods
Discrepancies between Eocene‐Oligocene and Middle Miocene sea‐level reconstructions are highlighted for focussed future research
Plio‐Pleistocene glacial deep‐sea temperature asymptoted to a freezing limit by ∼1.25–0.9 Ma; glacial sea‐level minima decreased ∼linearly