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A sedimentary record of the evolution of the global marine phosphorus cycle
Authors:Noah J Planavsky  Dan Asael  Alan D Rooney  Leslie J Robbins  Benjamin C Gill  Carol M Dehler  Devon B Cole  Susannah M Porter  Gordon D Love  Kurt O Konhauser  Christopher T Reinhard
Institution:1. The Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA;2. Department of Geosciences, Virginia Institute of Technology, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA;3. Department of Geology, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA;4. School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA;5. Department of Earth Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, USA;6. Department of Earth Sciences, University of California, Riverside, California, USA;7. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Abstract:Phosphorus (P) is typically considered to be the ultimate limiting nutrient for Earth's biosphere on geologic timescales. As P is monoisotopic, its sedimentary enrichment can provide some insights into how the marine P cycle has changed through time. A previous compilation of shale P enrichments argued for a significant change in P cycling during the Ediacaran Period (635–541 Ma). Here, using an updated P compilation—with more than twice the number of samples—we bolster the case that there was a significant transition in P cycling moving from the Precambrian into the Phanerozoic. However, our analysis suggests this state change may have occurred earlier than previously suggested. Specifically in the updated database, there is evidence for a transition ~35 million years before the onset of the Sturtian Snowball Earth glaciation in the Visingsö Group, potentially divorcing the climatic upheavals of the Neoproterozoic from changes in the Earth's P cycle. We attribute the transition in Earth's sedimentary P record to the onset of a more modern-like Earth system state characterized by less reducing marine conditions, higher marine P concentrations, and a greater predominance of eukaryotic organisms encompassing both primary producers and consumers. This view is consistent with organic biomarker evidence for a significant eukaryotic contribution to the preserved sedimentary organic matter in this succession and other contemporaneous Tonian marine sedimentary rocks. However, we stress that, even with an expanded dataset, we are likely far from pinpointing exactly when this transition occurred or whether Earth's history is characterized by a single or multiple transitions in the P cycle.
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