Multiple sulphur isotope records tracking basinal and global processes in the 1.98 Ga Zaonega Formation, NW Russia
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15115Dato
2018-09-19Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
                
            
Forfatter
Paiste, Kärt; Lepland, Aivo; Zerkle, A.L.; Kirsimäe, Kalle; Izon, G.; Patel, N.K.; McLean, F.; Kreitsmann, T.; Mänd, Kaarel; Bui, T.H.; Romashkin, Alexander E.; Rychanchik, Dimitry V.; Prave, Anthony RSammendrag
The exceptionally organic-rich rocks of the 1.98 Ga Zaonega Formation deposited in the Onega
 Basin, NW Russia, have refined our understanding of Earth System evolution during the
 Paleoproterozoic rise in atmospheric oxygen. These rocks were formed in vent- or seep influenced settings contemporaneous with voluminous mafic volcanism and contain strongly
 13C-depleted organic matter. Here we report new isotopic (δ34S, Δ33S, Δ36S, δ13Corg) and
 mineralogical, major element, total sulphur and organic carbon data for the upper part of the
 Zaonega Formation, which was deposited shortly after the termination of the Lomagundi-Jatuli
 positive carbon isotope excursion. The data were collected on a recently obtained 102 m drillcore section and show a δ13Corg shift from -38‰ to -25‰. Sedimentary sulphides have δ34S values typically between +15‰ and +25‰ reflecting closed-system sulphur isotope behaviour driven by high rates of microbial sulphate reduction, high sulphate demand, hydrothermal
 activity and hydrocarbon seepage. Four intervals record δ34S values that exceed +30‰. We
 interpret these unusually 34S-enriched sulphides to be a result of limited sulfate diffusion into
 pore waters due to changes in sedimentation and/or periods of basinal restriction. Additionally,
 there are four negative δ34S and positive Δ33S excursions that are interpreted to reflect changes
 in the open/closed-system behaviour of sulphate reduction or availability of reactive iron. Our
 findings highlight the influence of basinal processes in regulating sulphur isotope records and
 the need for care before interpreting such signals as reflecting global conditions.
Beskrivelse
Accepted manuscript version, licensed  CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.  Source at:  http://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.09.025 


English
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