Nature Communications (Dec 2023)

Transient fertilization of a post-Sturtian Snowball ocean margin with dissolved phosphate by clay minerals

  • Ernest Chi Fru,
  • Jalila Al Bahri,
  • Christophe Brosson,
  • Olabode Bankole,
  • Jérémie Aubineau,
  • Abderrazzak El Albani,
  • Alexandra Nederbragt,
  • Anthony Oldroyd,
  • Alasdair Skelton,
  • Linda Lowhagen,
  • David Webster,
  • Wilson Y. Fantong,
  • Benjamin J. W. Mills,
  • Lewis J. Alcott,
  • Kurt O. Konhauser,
  • Timothy W. Lyons

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44240-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Marine sedimentary rocks deposited across the Neoproterozoic Cryogenian Snowball interval, ~720-635 million years ago, suggest that post-Snowball fertilization of shallow continental margin seawater with phosphorus accelerated marine primary productivity, ocean-atmosphere oxygenation, and ultimately the rise of animals. However, the mechanisms that sourced and delivered bioavailable phosphate from land to the ocean are not fully understood. Here we demonstrate a causal relationship between clay mineral production by the melting Sturtian Snowball ice sheets and a short-lived increase in seawater phosphate bioavailability by at least 20-fold and oxygenation of an immediate post-Sturtian Snowball ocean margin. Bulk primary sediment inputs and inferred dissolved seawater phosphate dynamics point to a relatively low marine phosphate inventory that limited marine primary productivity and seawater oxygenation before the Sturtian glaciation, and again in the later stages of the succeeding interglacial greenhouse interval.