Related Content
Search Google Scholar for:
More Information
Related Jobs from ScienceCareers
|
|
Science 28 September 2007: Vol. 317. no. 5846, pp. 1903 - 1906 DOI: 10.1126/science.1140325
|
|
Reports
A Whiff of Oxygen Before the Great Oxidation Event?
Ariel D. Anbar,1,2*
Yun Duan,1
Timothy W. Lyons,3
Gail L. Arnold,1
Brian Kendall,4
Robert A. Creaser,4
Alan J. Kaufman,5
Gwyneth W. Gordon,1
Clinton Scott,3
Jessica Garvin,6
Roger Buick6
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 O 2 in the environment more than 50 million years before the start of the Great Oxidation Event.
1 School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.
2 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.
3 Department of Earth Sciences, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
4 Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2E3.
5 Department of Geology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
6 Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: anbar{at}asu.edu
Read the Full Text
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
- Reconstructing Earth's surface oxidation across the Archean-Proterozoic transition.
- Q. Guo, H. Strauss, A. J. Kaufman, S. Schroder, J. Gutzmer, B. Wing, M. A. Baker, A. Bekker, Q. Jin, S.-T. Kim, et al. (2009)
Geology
37, 399-402
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Isotopic Evidence for an Aerobic Nitrogen Cycle in the Latest Archean.
- J. Garvin, R. Buick, A. D. Anbar, G. L. Arnold, and A. J. Kaufman (2009)
Science
323, 1045-1048
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Mineral evolution.
- R. M. Hazen, D. Papineau, W. Bleeker, R. T. Downs, J. M. Ferry, T. J. McCoy, D. A. Sverjensky, and H. Yang (2008)
American Mineralogist
93, 1693-1720
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- The evolution of inorganic carbon concentrating mechanisms in photosynthesis.
- J. A Raven, C. S Cockell, and C. L De La Rocha (2008)
Phil Trans R Soc B
363, 2641-2650
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- When did oxygenic photosynthesis evolve?.
- R. Buick (2008)
Phil Trans R Soc B
363, 2731-2743
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Palaeoproterozoic ice houses and the evolution of oxygen-mediating enzymes: the case for a late origin of photosystem II.
- J. L Kirschvink and R. E Kopp (2008)
Phil Trans R Soc B
363, 2755-2765
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- The evolution of photosynthesis...again?.
- L. J Rothschild (2008)
Phil Trans R Soc B
363, 2787-2801
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Redox renaissance.
- A. D. Anbar and G. W. Gordon (2008)
Geology
36, 271-272
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Genome evolution in cyanobacteria: The stable core and the variable shell.
- T. Shi and P. G. Falkowski (2008)
PNAS
105, 2510-2515
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- The Oxygen Cycle of the Terrestrial Planets: Insights into the Processing and History of Oxygen in Surface Environments.
- J. Farquhar and D. T. Johnston (2008)
Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry
68, 463-492
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Late Archean Biospheric Oxygenation and Atmospheric Evolution.
- A. J. Kaufman, D. T. Johnston, J. Farquhar, A. L. Masterson, T. W. Lyons, S. Bates, A. D. Anbar, G. L. Arnold, J. Garvin, and R. Buick (2007)
Science
317, 1900-1903
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
|
|