Triple oxygen and multiple sulfur isotope constraints on the evolution of the post-Marinoan sulfur cycle
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Crockford, Peter W.
Sugiyama, Ichiko
Pellerin, Andre
Bui, Thi Hao
Hayles, Justin
Halverson, Galen P.
Wing, Boswell A.
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2015.12.017Metadata
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Crockford, Peter W., Benjamin R. Cowie, David T. Johnston, Paul F. Hoffman, Ichiko Sugiyama, Andre Pellerin, Thi Hao Bui, et al. 2016. “Triple Oxygen and Multiple Sulfur Isotope Constraints on the Evolution of the Post-Marinoan Sulfur Cycle.” Earth and Planetary Science Letters 435 (February): 74–83. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2015.12.017.Abstract
Triple oxygen isotopes within post-Marinoan barites have played an integral role in our understanding of Cryogenian glaciations. Reports of anomalous View the MathML source values within cap carbonate hosted barites however have remained restricted to South China and Mauritania. Here we extend the View the MathML source anomaly to northwest Canada with our new measurements of barites from the Ravensthroat cap dolostone with a minimum View the MathML source value of −0.75‰. For the first time we pair triple oxygen with multiple sulfur isotopic data as a tool to identify the key processes that controlled the post-Marinoan sulfur cycle. We argue using a dynamic 1-box model that the observed isotopic trends both in northwest Canada and South China can be explained through the interplay between sulfide weathering, microbial sulfur cycling and pyrite burial. An important outcome of this study is a new constraint placed on the size of the post-Marinoan sulfate reservoir (≈0.1% modern), with a maximum concentration of less than 10% modern. Through conservative estimates of sulfate fluxes from sulfide weathering and under a small initial sulfate reservoir, we suggest that observed isotopic trends are the product of a dynamic sulfur cycle that saw both the addition and removal of the View the MathML source anomaly over four to five turnovers of the post-Marinoan marine sulfate reservoir.Citable link to this page
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:34744144
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