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.
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Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Introduction
The secular rise of phosphorus (P) in Cryogenian marine sediments has been linked to post-Snowball Earth deglaciation resulting in enhanced phosphate (PO43-) supply to seawater, greater marine primary production, ocean-atmosphere oxygenation, and ultimately the evolution of metazoans1,2,3. The inference of higher dissolved seawater PO43- concentrations across the Neoproterozoic glaciations comes from Fe-rich deposits and shales containing significantly higher P concentrations relative to older sediments of similar depositional settings1,2. However, except for a broad association to mechanical weathering caused by erosional action of end-Snowball melting ice sheets, it remains unclear how PO43- was sourced from the continents and transported in quantitatively dissolvable forms to seawater to enable pervasive global ocean-atmosphere oxygenation.
In the modern world, most PO43- is transferred from land to the oceans by riverine-transported clay and metal oxide particles rather than in solution4,5,6. This view is consistent with the suggestion that detrital clay minerals associated with more acidic rivers during the Great Oxygenation Event (GOE) played a significant role in conveying PO43- from land to Paleoproterozoic seawater5. At times of less acid generation on land, highly reactive iron oxyhydroxides (Fe-oxHR) instead served as efficient particulate sorbents for dissolved phosphate5. As a corollary, we hypothesize that extensive weathering of continental landmasses by melting ice sheets at the end of the Cryogenian Snowball Earth glaciations7 drove up production, transport, and supply of fine-grained detrital clays and Fe-oxHR to the oceans, which served as vectors of marginal seawater enrichment with PO43-. Indeed, melting of the modern Greenland ice sheet shows that up to 97% PO43- exported by glacial meltwater is associated with suspended sediment particles8. This relationship is predictable, given that clay minerals, which tend to form rapidly upon the retreat of glaciers with climate warming9, together with Fe-oxHR, possess large surface-to-volume ratios. Together, they contain positive charged surfaces at the pH range of rivers that make them efficient adsorbents of dissolved PO43- anions4,5,6,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17.
To assess the potential of clay minerals and Fe-oxHR minerals as vectors of dissolved PO43- to post-Snowball seawater, we collected marine sediments exposed on the Isles of Islay and the Garvellachs in the Dalradian Supergroup, Scotland, spanning pre-glacial, deglacial, and post-glacial phases of the Neoproterozoic Sturtian Snowball glaciation7 (Fig. 1). The underlying pre-Snowball Tonian Lossit Limestone Formation (LLF) in the >4-km-thick Appin Group18,19,20,21,22,23 is characterized by organic-rich mudstones, sandstones, carbonate, and shallow seawater stromatolites. The glaciogenic tillite cap of the LLF passes conformably21 into the overlying ~1.1 km-thick Port Askaig Tillite Formation (PATF), correlated worldwide to Sturtian Snowball deposits based on geochronology, lithostratigraphy, and chemostratigraphy18,19,20,21,22,23. On the Garvellachs Island, the PATF appears as twelve discrete diamictite units containing dolostone clasts overlain by the ~40-m-thick Great Breccia, comprised of deformed sediment bedrock rafts transported by icebergs from land to the ocean margin, and the 29 to 40-m-thick disrupted beds dominated by Fe-rich siltstones and dolostone concretions. Up-section, ~30 diamictite layers with interlayered sandstone units grade upwards into transported granitic clasts, which are in turn conformably overlain by the post-Snowball Bonahaven Dolomite Formation18,19,21 (BDF). The BDF consists of ∼300-m-thick fine-grained clastic rocks composed of siltstones and mudstones, with occasional stromatolitic dolostone and evaporitic deposits indicating deposition in arid greenhouse climate times18,19,20,21,22,23.
In this study, we use a combination of geochemical techniques to demonstrate a causal relationship between continental erosion and the supply of dissolved PO43- to continental margin waters and associated temporal controls on seawater oxygenation dynamics across the Sturtian Snowball glaciation deposits of the Dalradian Supergroup.
Results and discussion
Bulk facies chemostratigraphy and mineralogy
Careful collection of outcrop samples took place in the field to avoid weathered and metamorphosed lithologies (Table S1). Comparative chemostratigraphic correlation of bulk facies geochemistry and δ13Ccarbonate and δ18Ocarbonate compositions (Figs. 2 & S1-S2) with previous studies of the same section18,19,20,21,22,23,24, together with sediment mineralogy (Fig. 3 & Table S2), was used to evaluate data quality and to account for potential post-depositional alteration of primary geochemical composition. In addition, cross plots of Fe/Ti vs. Al/(Al+Fe+Mn) (ref. 25) were used to constrain the potential influence of hydrothermal fluids (Fig. S3). Our δ13Ccarbonate and δ18Ocarbonate values fall within the range reported in previous studies for the pre-glacial, glacial and post-glacial lithologies18,19,21,22,23, which have been correlated by geochronology and chemo/lithostratigraphy to the Cryogenian-Sturtian interval in Australia, Mongolia, Siberia, China, Oman, Namibia and Canada7,18,19. The pre-/late-Snowball samples are marked by higher δ13Corg, Corg and δ13Ccarbonate excursions, compared to persistently lower tillite and immediate post-Snowball values (Fig. 2a-c). Although characterized by lower carbonate content relative to concentrations in tillite samples analyzed for C isotope distribution (Fig. 2d), X-ray diffraction (XRD) and thin-sectioned Scanning Electron Microscopy-Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (SEM-EDS) data are consistent with reported higher and more homogenous carbonate enrichment in the pre-/late-Snowball facies18,19,21,22 (Fig. 3 & Table S2). Associated δ18Ocarbonate trends generally decline up sequence (Fig. 2e), while the absence of δ13C and δ18O correlation suggests negligible diagenetic alteration of primary δ13Ccarbonate signal (Fig. S2).
Lithologies affected by greenschist metamorphism, confined to the margins of metabasaltic sills24, were excluded. Consistent with this sampling strategy, XRD and thin-sectioned SEM-EDS mineralogical analysis, revealed a major dominance of no to low-grade metamorphic clay minerals (Fig. 3 & Table S2). Typical clay minerals like kaolinite that are often associated with strong terrestrial weathering by chemical processes are rare in the samples, while muscovite and illite clay minerals believed to be most abundant in the modern upper continental crust (UCC)17, occur more commonly across the lithofacies (Fig. 3 & Table S2). Chlorite, which also tends to be enriched in the UCC, was detected mainly in the deglaciating tillites, while the presence of albite (a tectosilicate mineral) in all samples regardless of lithology (Fig. 3), suggests an association with the erosion of crystalline bedrocks19.
Overall, the SEM-EDS mineral maps together with XRD mineralogical analysis, show a variable prevalence of siliciclastic detrital material in all lithologies, with a dominance of sheet silicates and quartz, even in carbonate-rich facies. These findings agree with past observations18,19,20,21,22,23, evidenced here by fine-grained siliciclastic particles in post-Snowball sediments and the prevalence of coarser quartz grains in tillite and pre-Snowball samples. The tillites are noted for hosting abundant detrital grains likely associated with illite, muscovite, albite, and, to a lesser extent, kaolinite (Fig. 3d-e & Table 2S). Illite and muscovite are quantitatively more abundant in the post-Snowball facies. Although detected in the pre-Snowball rocks, illite is not always present in readily quantifiable amounts. Typically, chemical weathering of most rock-forming silicates promotes secondary formation of clay minerals and Fe(III)- and Al-oxides, with an accumulation of residual quartz, heavy minerals, and sheet silicates like muscovite and biotite26. Sediments and soils originating from this process can predictably contain >50% sheet silicates and Fe oxyhydroxides by volume, depending on the nature of the source rocks and prevailing climatic conditions17,26. The variable occurrence of illite and muscovite across all sampled lithologies could be due to varying degrees of detrital supply or distinct local diagenetic pathways, while the largely low kaolinite content may be the result of possible transformation because kaolinite reacts with K-feldspar to form illite during burial diagenesis17 and with alkaline fluids during metasomatism. Although chlorite can also form as a low-grade metamorphic mineral, with further transformation to muscovite at higher temperatures, the mineralogy of the facies is consistent with their suggested low metamorphic grade and observed preservation of primary features18,19,20,21,22,23. Further, the notable prevalence of quartz and sheet silicates (mainly clay minerals), including co-occurrence with tectosilicate albite, hint at the dominant supply of clastic debris to the primary sediments, derived from physical erosion of intermediate-to-felsic continental rocks (Fig. S4).
Bulk sediment geochemistry
A wide range of geochemical changes emerge along the studied lithostratigraphic section (Fig. 4 & Table S3), distinguished by persistently elevated bulk sediment P2O5, TiO2, Al2O5, Fe2O3, Cr, V, and Ni concentrations in the PATF and the lower BDF, with much lower and more variable concentrations recorded in the PS-16 section of the Port an t-Struthain rocks in the upper BDF (Fig. 4a-c & f-h). Notable Al2O5 and TiO2 peaks, especially in the PATF and lower BDF, agree with the prevalence of various mineral phases pointing to substantial detrital contribution to sediment accumulation across the sequence. To test this idea, elemental normalization to Ti—a detrital indicator of authigenic enrichment27,28—shows subtle enrichment consisting of two broad patterns across the stratigraphic profile (Fig. 4j-p). This relationship is highlighted by two observations. First, a reasonable stratigraphic correlation exists between P/Ti and Fe/Ti and to some degree with Mn/Ti ratios (Fig. 4n-p), although generally, MnO does not show significant lithostratigraphic variations (Fig. 4d). Second, a broad minimal correlation is observed for Cr/Ti, V/Ti, Ni/Ti, and Co/Ti (Fig. 4j-m), suggesting that their accumulation was co-regulated by the same sedimentary processes.
Interestingly, Cr/Ti is anomalous in the sense that in the lower BDF, when the other elements display multiple peaks, Cr/Ti distribution remains uniform, but becomes noticeable when enrichment in most elements is muted in the upper BDF Port an t-Struthain section (i.e., the PS-16 samples). To add to these observations, the near static Al2O3 to TiO2 ratios (Fig. 4q) are interpreted to either reflect stable detrital contribution and/or potential long-term sediment accumulation from a similar UCC rock source.
Comparable Fe2O3 to TiO2 and P2O5 to TiO2 ratios, together with Loss on Ignition (LOI) being inversely correlated with P2O5 and Fe2O3 content throughout the sampled section (Fig. 4r & Fig. S5), suggest bulk sediment P2O5 and Fe2O3 are most likely preserved in inorganic instead of organic and carbonate mineral phases. Where LOI values are elevated, they presumably predict higher combustible sedimentary organic and/or carbonate content, while lower values indicate the contrary, due to higher susceptibility of carbonates and organic matter to complete combustion to CO2 under elevated temperatures29. Indeed, the lowest LOI values are recorded in the carbonate-poor PATF and lower BDF section where sustained peak P2O5 and Fe2O3 concentrations are found, compared to the minor and more variable P2O5 content in the carbonate-rich LLF and upper BDF PS-16 facies (Figs. 4c, e & 3r). Higher LOI values that tend to relate inversely with P2O5 and Fe2O3 concentrations across the section (Fig. S5), are unique to the carbonate-rich LLF and PS-16 upper BDF samples. Measured trace metals are generally enriched across the sequence relative to UCC values (Fig. 4s-y). Notably, significant co-enrichment of P is also observed in the tillites and upwards relative to the UCC, compared to pre-Snowball times (Fig. 4t). Despite their overall similar redox properties, Mn enrichment patterns relative to the UCC are dissimilar to those of Fe, particularly in some tillite and immediate post-Snowball samples (Fig. 4s & u), pointing perhaps to different enrichment pathways or the known differences in sensitivity to reduction. Chromium shows two anomalous enrichment peaks relative to UCC, one in the LLF that is also seen for V and Fe and a second corresponding to samples shown above to have high Cr/Ti ratios in the upper BDF (Fig. 4j, s, x & y).
The generally low Corg levels across the sampled sequence (Fig. 2b) are considered to be of little importance to sedimentary P and Fe preservation. Positive correlations are revealed for P2O5 and Fe2O3 and poorly mobile TiO2 and Al2O3 across lithostratigraphy, although they are much weaker with respect to Al2O3 for the pre-Snowball Earth LLF samples (Fig. 5a-c). A similar relation appears for Fe2O3 versus TiO2 and Al2O3 plots, but like P2O5 the correlation is unsupported for Al2O3 in the LLF section (Fig. 5d-e). When considered in light of the strong positive correlation between Al2O3 and TiO2 (Fig. 5f) and Fe2O3 and P2O5 (Fig. 5a) in all three lithological sections, the observations suggest some level of decoupling of pre-Snowball P2O5 and Fe2O3 enrichment pathways with respect to Al2O3 sources (Fig. 5d-f). The strong correlations between TiO2, P2O5 and Fe2O3 for tillites and post-Snowball facies may consequently be the result of sediment source homogenization by the indiscriminate erosional action of melting ice sheets. Regardless, these observations provide further evidence for across sequence P2O5 and Fe2O3 enrichment by detritus.
The low Corg and negative δ13Ccarbonate distribution in the facies (Fig. 2 & S1-S2) suggest microbial oxidation of Corg likely prevailed at the sediment-water interface, which would have promoted the release of organic-bound P into sea and sediment pore water, influencing dissolved aqueous P content and eventual incorporation into various sedimentary minerals. This would have been particularly relevant in the immediate post-Snowball interval where apatite formation became more pronounced, compared to the rest of the section (Fig. 3 & Table S2). It is also possible that prevailing environmental conditions influenced ongoing microbial transformation of P-rich Corg and Fe-oxHR minerals to trigger enough diagenetic sediment porewater P supersaturation30. For example, the geochemical data suggest that bulk primary sediment P was predominantly associated with non-calcium bearing minerals such as Fe-oxHR and unreactive detrital silicate phases (Figs. S6-S9), which would have starved primary sediments of dissolved P. Except for some immediate post-Snowball samples, across-sequence CaO and P2O5 inverse correlations, being up to 79% for the tillites (Fig. S6a-b), corroborate limited potential P preservation in non-calcium bearing mineral phases. As discussed above, this view is supported by low LOI, low-carbonate facies associated with bulk high P2O5/Fe2O3 ratios and high LOI, high-carbonate lithologies with bulk low-P2O5/Fe2O3 ratios (Fig. S5). Overall decreasing P2O5 concentration coincides with Corg content that increases from post-Snowball to pre-Snowball facies (Fig. S6c), signalling either possible diagenetic P enrichment or loss in primary sediments through microbial oxidation of organic-rich P biomass originating from the water column. Indeed, our lowest δ13Corg and Corg values in the tillites and immediate post-Snowball interval (Fig. 2a-b) coincide with P2O5 enrichment compared to the low P2O5 pre-Snowball samples (Fig. S6c-d). Based on these observations, microbial recycling of organic-rich P at the sediment-water interface could explain the increasing prevalence of apatite in the immediate post-Snowball interval. However, the data suggest that the P supersaturation required to spontaneously precipitate large amounts of apatite precursor phases and significant substitution in carbonate minerals30,31 was limited, especially in the pre-Snowball interval. Instead, our results indicate that dominant P supply and enrichment in the primary sediments mostly reflect detrital loading with non-apatite minerals. Moreover, as we show below, the synthesis of Ca-rich P minerals was perhaps limited by abundant Fe-oxHR particles acting as efficient scavengers of dissolved PO43- at the sediment seawater interface.
Redox-sensitive Mn shows a weak negative correlation with TiO2 and Al2O3 across all facies (Fig. S10), suggesting that Mn enrichment pathways are to some extent decoupled from those of P2O5 and Fe2O3, particularly given the considerable positive correlation between P2O5, TiO2, and Al2O3 (Fig. 5). Except for the short-lived spike in Cr enrichment in the upper BDF relative to Ti, overall, our data do not indicate that significant oxidative/chemical weathering of terrestrial rocks was a predominant mechanism for PO43- delivery to seawater throughout the sampled section. This observation is consistent with independent findings pointing to primary sediment detrital inputs of continental provenance18,20,21,22,23, reinforced by our stronger physical rather than chemical weathering indicators. This relationship is further strengthened by the association of average UCC profiles (Fig. S11) with the continental margin location of the sedimentary basin.
High Cr/Ti ratios recorded during the GOE were previously ascribed to mobilization of dissolved Cr from land to the ocean by acid rock drainage via the activity of acidophilic aerobic bacteria following oxygenation of the atmosphere27. A similar but previously unreported acidification event could explain the brief spike in Cr/Ti ratios in the upper BDF. However, a close look at the data indicates that total P2O5 and Fe2O3 contents immediately before, during and after the transient increase in Cr/Ti ratios remained low, suggesting that even if this event was triggered by acidic weathering of terrestrial rocks, it cannot explain the behaviour, source, and mechanism of P2O5 enrichment in our samples.
Further, the highly soluble properties of ferrous and ferric Fe under extreme acidic conditions characteristic of acid rock drainage32 should translate to relative co-enrichment of Fe and Cr in the sediments with respect to poorly mobile Ti. This relationship is not seen in the studied section. Moreover, the broad expression of similar but conservative Fe/Ti and P/Ti profiles throughout the BDF and the tillite formation are consistent with reported low to moderate chemical weathering indices in the tillites33. Thus, the combined data better reflect terrestrial detritus contributing to high bulk P2O5 and Fe2O3 enrichment in the PATF and the lower BDF section, assuming continental erosion by melting ice sheets was the principal source of detrital inputs into the sediment pile. Moreover, our bulk P data are consistent with historical records showing a substantial spike in the P content of Cryogenian fine-grained marine siliciclastic rocks2 (Fig. 6).
Highly reactive Fe and dissolved P chemistry
In light of the above discussions, we pose the question of whether P was associated with Fe in the primary sediments and, if so, whether such a relationship can provide insights into seawater-dissolved P profiles. The distribution of leachable highly reactive Fe (FeHR) phases in the form of Fe-oxHR + pyrite Fe and poorly reactive sheet silicate Fe (Fig. 7a) in representative samples was therefore explored according to references34,35,36 (see methods). Intriguingly, the Fe-oxHR phases decline by a factor of two when emerging from the Snowball ice sheet melting stage and transitioning into post-Snowball greenhouse state (Fig. 7b). The ratio of Fe-oxHR over total Fe content, suggest that Fe-oxHR constitutes only a small proportion of total Fe across the sequence, with distinct fluctuations that parallel low pre-Snowball P2O5, immediate post-Snowball high P2O5 and late post-Snowball low P2O5 intervals (Fig. 7c). A similar pattern is noted when Fe-oxHR concentrations are compared to unreactive sheet silicate Fe content, with the data suggesting that the majority of Fe throughout the sampled stratigraphy is largely present as unreactive silicates. These data are consistent with the above observations pointing to significant detrital contribution to sediment Fe enrichment, as opposed to chemical sedimentation.
Bulk sediment P analysis, as shown by our results, provides important clues on the overall behaviour of P in marine waters1,2,37,38. However, bulk sediment P content is a poor differentiator of reactive and unreactive P composition and therefore is an unreliable indicator of P bioavailability. Instead, we consider the linear correlation between Fe-oxHR-bound P and dissolved P (refs. 1,37,38,39). in modern marine systems as the best estimator of dissolved P behaviour during sediment deposition, following the recommendation of Thompson and others40 (see methods). We found 0% of measurable leached P associated with the Fe carbonates, compared to ~9.1% for the combined goethite, akageneite and hematite phases (all post-Snowball); ~45.5% for magnetite (42.5% post-Snowball and 3.0% pre-Snowball); ~6.1% for hematite (all pre-Snowball); and 39.4% for the tillites and post-Snowball sheet silicates (Figs. S7 & S8).
The sheet silicates in the tillites and immediate post-Snowball, record the highest leachable P content. Overall, the distribution of P between the sheet silicates and the Fe-oxHR reservoir indicate that high P enrichment in association with sheet silicates at the terminal Snowball immediate post-Snowball greenhouse transition, is marked by redistribution of P to a putative magnetite sink (Fig. 7d). A corresponding ∼twofold reduction in the size of the leachable Fe-oxHR inventory at this time would have reduced the potential removal efficiency of dissolved PO43- from seawater by an equally similar magnitude, since Fe-oxHR is otherwise a strong P sink37,38,39. This process alone would have enabled substantial build-up of dissolved PO43- in immediate post-Snowball seawater relative to the period before and after, both distinguished by a higher Fe-oxHR reservoir (Fig. 7b). Furthermore, the peaking of putative sheet silicate P in the tillites, which is hundreds of times above baseline detection concentrations of 5.47 ppb in the pre-Snowball interval, is consistent with rock flour production expected with the mechanical grinding action of melting ice sheets on the bedrock. This supposition is supported by SEM-EDS imaging showing elevated fine-grained sheet silicate clasts in the immediate post-Snowball samples (Fig. 3d).
We assume that the coincidental rise of appreciable P enrichment in immediate post-Snowball magnetite grains relative to the tillites interval, points to increasing immediate post-Snowball co-precipitation of magnetite and dissolved PO43- out of seawater. A test of this hypothesis finds that peaks in magnetite-associated P/Fe ratios correlate with the appearance and persistence of magnetite-bound P at the tillite post-Snowball boundary and upwards (Fig. 7d-e). This up-section correlation between magnetite-bound P concentration and magnetite P/Fe ratios, suggests magnetite precipitation captures a snapshot of the potential dissolved PO43- content of the reservoir from which it formed. The distinctly variable but higher P/Fe values in the late low-P2O5 post-Snowball interval are best explained by emergent long-term moderate presence and persistence of magnetite-bound P in the facies (Fig. 7d). The mostly non-variant magnetite-bound P trend at this time, with the exception of a single spike, points to steady scavenging of PO43- by an increasingly scarce magnetite reservoir, instead of a rise in dissolved PO43- content.
The release of bound PO43- to seawater and/or sediment pore water by diagenetic dissolution of Fe-oxHR minerals could, however, account for the two times smaller Fe-oxHR budget in the immediate post-Snowball P2O5-rich rocks, compared to the P2O5-depleted sediments that bracket this interval. Yet, because diagenesis results in considerable loss of Fe-oxHR-bound P, this interval should be accompanied by parallel lowering of sedimentary P2O5 and Fe-oxHR-associated P content if this were the case. Instead, we observe co-increase in both bulk P2O5 and potential magnetite-bound P at this time. Further, the comparatively lower pre/late post-Snowball P2O5 and magnetite P reservoirs cannot be explained by reductive dissolution of Fe-oxHR since their Fe-oxHR inventories are about twice the size found in the P2O5-rich immediate post-Snowball section. In addition, the transition of bulk Fe/Al ratios from the higher values expected with enhanced authigenic Fe enrichment during the pre-Snowball time to lower detrital Fe/Al ratios averaging ~0.5 in the tillites and for most of the post-Snowball sediments, is consistent with negligible reductive Fe mobilisation by diagenetic microbial Fe-reduction34,41,42. Importantly, the enrichment of P in the leachable immediate post-Snowball magnetite reservoir, which comes after a rise in associated sheet silicate-bound P, is best explained by transfer of sheet silicate-bound P to seawater, followed by chemical enrichment in the sediment pile by Fe-oxHR produced in the greenhouse interval.
Our estimates are conservative within reasonable error margins, considering that the designation of extractable Fe-oxHR phases in the defined Fe mineral pools can at times be misleading. For example, goethite was previously detected in the ammonium oxalate extract attributed to magnetite43. Our data are nonetheless consistent with SEM-EDS mineral imaging and bulk XRD mineralogical analysis, which failed to detect putative goethite-enriched phases as a major mineral constituent in the samples, suggesting an absence or low levels below detection. Instead, putative crystalline magnetite grains were observed in the immediate post-Snowball section, but rarely in the tillites and the pre- and post-Snowball intervals, interpreted as either an absence or very low concentrations (Fig. S9). This observation is consistent with potential pre-Snowball magnetite contributing only an estimated ~5.4% P to the total extractable P pool, compared to up to 37.8% for the post-Snowball time.
Magnetite precipitation and seawater dissolved P behaviour
Magnetite, a common Fe mineral in Precambrian Fe-rich sedimentary rocks, often forms through a combination of biotic and abiotic processes involving ferrihydrite and green rust precursors44,45,46,47,48. In this light, green rust and ferrihydrite are thought to sequester and bury dissolved seawater trace nutrients in the sedimentary pile49,50. Particularly, the ability for both green rust and ferrihydrite to bind aqueous PO43- has been demonstrated experimentally37,38,39,51,52,53,54, with green rust reported to possess a greater propensity to bind PO43- than ferric Fe53. It is thus reasonable to assume that the incorporation of P into magnetite crystals scaled proportionally with the concentration of primary seawater green rust and ferrihydrite magnetite precursors.
Nonetheless, although prograde metamorphism exerts a negligible effect on magnetite transformation, it can become significant in the presence of olivine55,56. Mineralogical appraisal of our samples by XRD and SEM-EDS mapping, however failed to identify olivine as an important mineral phase throughout the sequence, while the influence of hydrothermal fluids on Fe distribution appears to be insignificant (see Fig. S3). Moreover, a lack of covariation between carbonate Fe and magnetite Fe reservoirs across sequence stratigraphy, further suggests little or no thermal breakdown of Fe carbonates to magnetite by burial metamorphism57. Importantly, spontaneous binding of PO43- to magnetite occurs by physical adsorptive intermolecular attractive forces and by chemical transfer of electrons between magnetite and PO43- molecules, promoting an adsorption capacity of ∼57.8 mg of PO43- per gram and resulting in a positive correlation between magnetite-bound and dissolved PO43- (ref. 13). This binding of dissolved PO43- by magnetite enhances magnetite’s stability12,13 and therefore enhancement of possible long-term preservation in sediments.
We can only speculate that the prevalence of putative magnetite grains, particularly in the immediate post-glacial P2O5-rich interval, compared to the low P2O5 intervals, reflects nascent post-glacial seawater conditions, probably related to the balance between seawater oxygen content and local Fe sedimentary mechanisms. For instance, modern turbid Arctic glacial outflows generally display high dissolved Fe content of up to 20 µM, which decreases to nanomolar concentrations at the shelf-fjord water mixing boundary58. This trend results from rapid flocculation of dissolved Fe at this interface and the binding of particle surfaces because of increasing salinity and pH, triggering the loss of up to 98% total dissolved Fe (refs. 58,59). Similar rapid precipitation of particulate Fe with increasing oxygenation at Snowball melt water-seawater interfaces would have accelerated the scavenging of dissolved P released by clay minerals along the gradients of rising salinity and pH in the continental margin waters5,6.
Although we are unable to quantitatively distinguish the extent of Fe(II) oxidation at the end-Snowball post-Snowball transition, predominantly positive δ56Febulk sedimentary values (Table S4) indicate that partial Fe(II) oxidation60 was common throughout the deposition of the studied sequence. This process would have favoured preferential formation of magnetite as allowed by local thermodynamic conditions of redox, electrical conductivity, pH, and temperature61,62. For instance, magnetite precipitation and stability may have been favoured at the lower temperatures and pH conditions that accompanied the immediate post-glacial CO2-rich world61,62. It is also possible that the reduction of ferrihydrite by biomass to magnetite could have been common45,47. However, the absence of strong negative δ56Fe signatures across the studied profile is consistent with overall negligible diagenetic production of magnetite and Fe carbonates via dissimilatory microbial reduction of Fe-oxHR. Thus, considering the linear relationship existing between magnetite-bound and aqueous PO43- (ref. 12), PO43- bioavailability in the immediate post-Snowball waters potentially increased by at least 20-fold compared to pre-Snowball conditions. Unlike the immediate post-Snowball interval, putative immediate pre-Snowball magnetite-bound P remained below the instrument detection limit of ~5 ppb, with the data indicating that unreactive silicate-bound P dominated bulk P burial before and during the Sturtian Snowball (Fig. S7).
Implications for seawater redox
Carbonate-rich samples with <5% Fe content tend to produce anomalously high FeHR/FeT ratios34. The reconstructed Fe-based redox trends were therefore evaluated for deviations as a function of Fe and carbonate content. The absence of significant differences regardless of total Fe and carbonate content resulting in consistent trends along sequence stratigraphy, was taken to imply a negligible impact of carbonate content on the reliability of the Fe-based redox proxy. We further interpret the general lack of significant deviations in the Fe-based redox proxy profiles as a reflection of the significant siliciclastic and Fe-rich content of the studied lithologies18,19,20,21,22,23, including those containing carbonates, as established by our geochemical analyses. The impact of sedimentation rates was determined to be negligible, considering that estimated values are four times lower than those expected to compromise the sensitivity of the Fe-based redox proxy34 (see supplementary information).
Average FeHR/FeT ratios are 0.55 ± 0.21, 0.16 ± 0.04, and 0.68 ± 0.30 for the pre-Snowball and tillites, the P2O5-rich immediate post-Snowball, and the P2O5-poor late post-Snowball intervals, respectively (Fig. 8a). Their corresponding average FePy/FeT ratios are 0.21 ± 0.22, 0.31 ± 0,34, and 0.42 ± 0.31, respectively (Fig. 8b). The Fepy/FeHR ratios of <0.8 suggest deposition of the entire sediment profile in mainly ferruginous-like conditions, although the FeHR/FeT ratios of <0.22 in the immediate post-Snowball interval are consistent with oxygenated waters, while the >0.38 FeHR/FeT ratios indicate anoxic bottom water depositional conditions for the pre-Snowball, tillite, and late post-Snowball samples34,35,36. Average FeHR/FeT values for samples straddling the peak post-glacial P2O5 interlude correlate negatively with their associated magnetite-bound P values, implying rising magnetite-bound P values coincide with lower FeHR/FeT ratios associated with oxic waters (Fig. 8c). No such correlation is observed for the pre-Snowball, tillites and late post-Snowball samples. These observations provide substantial evidence that the transitory rise in sedimentary P2O5 content in the immediate post-Snowball sediments was likely attended by transient seawater oxygenation and that magnetite indeed records dissolved seawater PO43- dynamics at this time.
The oxygenation trends are further highlighted by temporal Fe/Al profiles across the sequence34,41,42,63 (Fig. 8d). In this regard, the >0.5 pre-Snowball Fe/Al ratios are generally consistent with higher sediment pyrite enrichments, compared to tillites samples and the immediate post-Snowball facies, which are depleted in pyrite (Figs. 7b & 8b). Such high Fe/Al values have been linked to the deposition of anoxic sediments beneath modern sulphide-enriched seawater, and lower values characterize oxic settings with limited Corg supply to sediments41,42. Due to persistent supply of continental detritus as shown above, together with overall sedimentation rates that do not compromise the FeHR/FeT proxy as discussed in the supplementary information, the >0.5 Fe/Al ratios are best explained by syngenetic changes in anoxic pyrite precipitation. The <0.5 Fe/Al ratios, however, do not effectively delineate the pyrite-poor anoxic tillites from the apparently oxic immediate post-Snowball deposit (Fig. 8a), possibly due to increase input of Al-rich detritus during deposition of the tillites and immediate post-Snowball facies (Fig. 4b). Similarly, <0.5 Fe/Al ratios in the anoxic pyrite-poor late post-Snowball interval, as also suggested by the FeHR/FeT redox proxy, are followed by a small >0.5 Fe/Al spike corresponding to anoxic conditions (Fig. 8a) and pyrite enrichment at the top of the section (Figs. 7b, 8b & 8d).
Furthermore, a numerical biogeochemical model64,65 (see methods) replicates the observed temporal rise and fall in seawater PO43- content and the transient immediate-post Snowball oxygenation event (Fig. 8e-j). The model which considers abrupt large input of riverine PO43- to near continental margin waters and the deep ocean, suggests that the initial considerable introduction of PO43- to continental margin waters could have briefly triggered seawater deoxygenation due to eutrophication (Fig. 8i). We note that the early rise in sedimentary P2O5 content was not immediately accompanied by seawater oxygenation. Moreover, the model shows that rising dissolved seawater PO43- concentration would have promoted increased PO43- burial, with subsequent decline in supply resulting in seawater deoxygenation (Fig. 8k-n), similar to our observations.
Our data reveal bulk P content comparable to previously published concentrations for fine grain siliciclastic Cryogenian facies. These data suggest that Cryogenian continental seawater P bioavailability before, during, and after the Sturtian glaciations may have been limited by persistent detrital and variable Fe-OXHR loading. Further, microbial recycling of organic-rich P at the primary sediment-water interface was insufficient to generate sediment porewater P saturation to spontaneously trigger vast precipitation of calcium-bearing P minerals across the sequence. This observation limits potential diagenetic interference with primary sediment P content. Production of dissolved sheet silicate bound PO43- would have been facilitated by grinding of the bedrock by thawing ice sheets, with the generation of sub-glacial acidity66. These subglacial acidic conditions, combined with acidic water produced by the immediate post-Snowball high CO2 atmosphere67, would have sustained chemical leaching of P from rocks, including apatite minerals68. The sheet silicate clay minerals that are expected to more easily bind PO43- in more acidic conditions4,5,6 transported and liberated bound PO43- to seawater following contact with higher marine pH5,6,10 and salinity11,17. The sudden decline in leachable sheet silicate P entering the immediate post-Snowball state, followed by abrupt rise in magnetite P content by at least a factor of 200 compared to Pre-Snowball hints at a potential switch in P sink from clays to seawater. The increase in dissolved seawater P promoted primary productivity and oxygenation, with the resultant recycled biomass P captured together with dissolved inorganic P and preserved by Fe-oxHR minerals generated in the oxidized water column (Fig. 9). Taken together, the data indicate a major switch from marine waters with low dissolved PO43- content to an enlarged inventory created by a deglaciating Cryogenian Snowball clay factory.
Methods
Sampling and sample preparation
Outcrop sampled lithologies and their locations are described in Table S1. Only a subset of representative rocks were analyzed for this study, but the overall collection was used to establish the placement of samples along sequence stratigraphy. Prior to geochemical analysis, the outer exposed layers of samples were removed and only the unweathered portions were used for analysis. A fraction was milled into a fine powder for geochemical, chemostratigraphic and XRD mineralogical analyses. Slices of whole rock samples were thin sectioned and polished for scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS).
Mineralogical analysis
X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis for bulk semi-quantitative qualitative mineralogy analysis was undertaken with a PANalytical Xpert-pro and a Bruker D8 ADVANCE diffractometers at Cardiff University and University of Poitiers, respectively, as previously described69,70,71. SEM-EDS analysis was performed with an Oxford FEI-XL30 fitted Environmental SEM (ESEM) connected to an EDS system at Cardiff University. Analyses were conducted on polished thin sections coated with carbon to a thickness of 14 nm with a BIO-RAD SC500 sputter. The SEM-EDS analyses were run at a working distance of 8.9 mm and a 15 kV accelerating voltage. Backscattered elemental maps, point-specific atomic composition and spectra were combined to identify putative mineral phases. Semi-quantitative XRD analyses of the relative abundance of the mineral assemblages was calculated using the integrated area ratios of the principal peaks after decomposition by the FYTIK program72.
Elemental analysis
An approximate 250 mg of bulk rock powders were dissolved using reagent grade acids in closed screw-top Teflon vessels (Savillex) at 90 °C for one day in concentrated 3 ml 40% HF, 3 ml 32% HCl, and 1 ml 65% HNO3. Excess HF was neutralised with 93 ml H3B03 (20 g/L) aqueous solution. Elements were measured by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES) using a Horiba Jobin Yvon® Ultima 2 spectrometer with boron as an internal standard. Calibrations were made with ACE, JB2, and WSE international standards, with relative standard deviation of ≤1% for SiO2, ≤2% for the other major elements, and ≤5% for traces elements.
Iron speciation analysis
Chemical extraction of sediment Fe phases was conducted using the sequential Fe extraction protocol of Poulton and Canfield and Fe measured using the ferrozine method34,35,36. Redox trends were further constrained using the distribution of Fe/Al ratios across the studied section, where average ratios of ~0.55 ± 0.11 are common for oxic waters, with much greater values for anoxic settings34,35,36. Sediment Al/(Al+Fe+Mn) content was used to demonstrate that hydrothermal contribution25 of Fe to the sediments was negligible and that observed high Fe/Al ratios cannot be associated with hydrothermal activity. The sequential Fe extraction procedure resulted in the quantification of eight operationally defined Fe phases: (1) Total bulk rock Fe (FeT) from whole rock dissolved powder using hydrofluoric acid (HF); (2) Poorly reactive sheet silicates Fe or sheet silicates (FeSS) extracted with boiling 12 M HCl; (3) Reducible oxyhydr(oxides), including goethite, akageneite and hematite Fe (Fe-oxy) with sodium dithionite, and magnetite Fe with ammonium oxalate (FeMag); (4) Carbonate-associated Fe (FeCarb) extracted with sodium acetate; (5) pyrite Fe (FePy) extracted using the chromium reduction method. (6) Unreactive silicate Fe (FeURS) was determined as FeURS =(FeT) – (FeSS + Fe-oxy + FeMag + FeCarb + FePy).
Chemically extractable Fe-bound P analysis
Co-extracted P associated with the Fe phases was approximated following the optimized Fe-P speciation extraction procedure of Thompson and others40 for ancient sediments and Fe and P co-measured by ICP-AES. These included Fe carbonate bound-P (Fe-Pcarb), Fe oxyhydr(oxides) associated-P (Fe-oxHR-P), magnetite bound-P (PMag) and sheet silicate Fe associated P (PSS). The remaining P was assumed tied up mainly with unreactive silicates (PURS), first verified by a lack of correlation between total organic carbon and P. We use multiple lines of geochemical evidence, together with Loss on Ignition (LOI) to show that most P trapped in the sediments is bound to inorganic mineral phases. Further, SEM-EDS and XRD analyses were used to show that apatite is not a major mineral phase in the sediments. The potential PURS fraction was then estimated from PURS = (PT) – (Fe-Pcarb + Fe-oxHR-P + Pmag + Pss). Because of the linear correlation between dissolved P and particulate Fe-oxHR in marine sediments37,38,39, we further evaluate the distribution of P in the Fe-oxHR phases to approximate the general behaviour of dissolved P across the studied section.
Stable isotope analysis
For analysis of δ13C and δ18O in carbonates, powdered samples weighed into septum vials were flushed with helium, acidified with 99% orthophosphoric acid, and left to react for 24 hours at 60 °C to ensure complete dolomite dissolution. The long-term precision of in-house Carrara marble standard was 0.05‰ for both δ18O and δ13C (1 SD). Organic carbon samples were acidified in 10% HCl and left to react for up to two days to remove all inorganic carbon, prior to δ13Corg measurement. Residues were rinsed three times, dried and weighed into tin capsules. The aperture of the autosampler determined the maximum amount of sediment that could be analysed for Corg to be 60-80 mg. Because of low Corg content, total analysable minimum Corg was estimated to be 10 µg. To allow calibration of such small samples, three standards (IAEA-CH6 [δ13C = −10.449], IAEA-6oo [δ13C = −27.771] and in-house caffeine [δ13C = −33.30]) were dissolved in de-ionised water to improve homogeneity and allow accurate dosing of small aliquots using a micropipette. Results for IAEA-CH6 and the in-house caffeine were used to estimate a correction function for sample size and size-dependent two-point normalization, which was applied to IAEA-600 as independent standard. The resultant precision was dependent on sample size. The long-term precision for δ13C was estimated to be 0.09 (1 SD) for routine samples containing ≥100 µg C. However, the standard deviation increases with decreasing sample size to 0.38 for aliquots of 10–30 µg C for the present study (IAEA-600, n = 15). Iron isotope analysis was conducted on rock powders as previously described71.
Numerical modelling
A four-box ocean PO43- model was simulated using the equations described in reference64. The model was operated from an initial low oxygen steady state and followed by a pulse of reactive P from a riverine source or from within the ocean. The latter state represents within the ocean the chemical weathering of glacial debris as a source of PO43- to seawater. The initial steady state flux conditions at t = 0 assume half the annual amount of current riverine PO43- supply to seawater and increased flux of reductants to the surface ocean equivalent to 1×1013 mol O2, equating to ~5% PAL of O2 producing a slightly oxic ocean surface and anoxic ocean interior and shelf bottom waters, except for ~20% of the proximal shelf. At t = 0 a pulse of P was delivered to the system by increasing the riverine PO43- input by 50% for a total of 5 Myr in duration or adding this additional PO43- throughout the ocean interior. In agreement with geological evidence, the model calculates the relationship between PO43- and ocean-atmosphere oxygenation and PO43- burial rates as authigenic calcium phosphate, Fe-oxHR and organic matter bound P (refs. 64,65).
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Acknowledgements
Thanks to Diana Carlsson for help with the fieldwork and sample collection, Stefan Lalonde with trace and major element analyses and Olivier Rouxel for support with iron isotope analysis. We are grateful to Ian Fairchild for inspiring important discussions on the Cryogenian sedimentology and stratigraphy of Islay and the Garvellachs Islands. We thank Flavia Boscolo Galazzo for insightful comments. This work was supported by funds from The European Research Council (ERC) Seventh Framework (F7) program, grant No: 336092. Support is acknowledged from La Région Nouvelle Aquitaine, France.
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E.C.F. designed research; E.C.F., C.B., A.O., A.N., O.B., J.A.B. and J.A. conducted research; L.A .and B.M. developed the numerical model; D.W. and A.S. produced field and stratigraphic maps. E.C.F. and L.L. collected samples; E.C.F., A.E., K.K., O.B., W.F., J.A.B., J.A. and T.L. analysed data. E.C.F. wrote the paper with significant contributions from all co-authors.
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Fru, E.C., Bahri, J.A., Brosson, C. et al. Transient fertilization of a post-Sturtian Snowball ocean margin with dissolved phosphate by clay minerals. Nat Commun 14, 8418 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44240-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44240-9
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