Title The environmental context of carbonaceous compressions and implications for organism preservation 1.40 Ga and 0.63 Ga
Authors Zhang, Fenglian
Wang, Huajian
Ye, Yuntao
Deng, Yan
Lyu, Yitong
Wang, Xiaomei
Yu, Zhichao
Lyu, Dan
Lu, Yuanzheng
Zhou, Chuanming
Bi, Lina
Deng, Shenghui
Zhang, Shuichang
Canfield, Donald E.
Affiliation Res Inst Petr Explorat & Dev, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China
Peking Univ, Sch Earth & Space Sci, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China
Chinese Acad Sci, Ctr Excellence Life & Paleoenvironm, Nanjing Inst Geol & Palaeontol, State Key Lab Palaeobiol & Stratig, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China
Univ Southern Denmark, Inst Biol & Nordcee, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark
Keywords NEOPROTEROZOIC DOUSHANTUO FORMATION
EDIACARAN LANTIAN FORMATION
BURGESS-SHALE
BLACK SHALES
EXCEPTIONAL PRESERVATION
MULTICELLULAR EUKARYOTES
TUANSHANZI FORMATION
MATTER PRESERVATION
INTEGRATED CARBON
YANSHAN RANGE
Issue Date 1-Jul-2021
Publisher PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
Abstract Fossil life in the Precambrian is commonly preserved as carbonaceous compressions, where Pre-Cryogenian carbonaceous compressions mainly occur in organic-poor rocks. Black-shale-preserved carbonaceous compressions have become more common since the Ediacaran Period. To explore the depositional context of carbonaceous compressions, micro X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (mu-XRF) was used to image elemental distributions in carbonaceous compressions and surrounding rocks in Mesopmterozoic and Ediacaran-aged rocks. The carbonaceous compressions preserved in the Xiamaling green silty mudstones (1.40 Ga) and Lantian black shales (0.63 Ga) were selected and scanned, respectively. The behavior of redox-sensitive elements (Mo, U, V, Zn, Cu) in the Xiamaling and Lantian rocks and carbonaceous compressions suggest that the overlying water conditions during their sedimentation were not sulfidic. However, the co-enrichments of Fe and S in Xiamaling and Lantian carbonaceous compressions indicate pyrite permineralization. The Lantian carbonaceous compressions have a higher pyrite permineralization degree and a lower organism decomposition degree than those of the Xiamaling carbonaceous compressions. We speculate that these differences are related to a higher sulfate reduction rate and a lower dissimilatory iron reduction rate in the sediments hosting the Lantian carbonaceous compressions. Such conditions might be achieved through rapid burial and encircling by clay minerals. Overall, our results shed new light on understanding the preservation processes of the Precambrian life and the influence of environmental factors.
URI http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/614568
ISSN 0031-0182
DOI 10.1016/j.palaeo.2021.110449
Indexed SCI(E)
Appears in Collections: 地球与空间科学学院

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