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1.
Sci Adv ; 10(4): eadj4789, 2024 Jan 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38277446

RESUMO

Paleoarchean jaspilites are used to track ancient ocean chemistry and photoautotrophy because they contain hematite interpreted to have formed following biological oxidation of vent-derived Fe(II) and seawater P-scavenging. However, recent studies have triggered debate about ancient seawater Fe and P deposition. Here, we report greenalite and fluorapatite (FAP) nanoparticles in the oldest, well-preserved jaspilites from the ~3.5-billion-year Dresser Formation, Pilbara Craton, Australia. We argue that both phases are vent plume particles, whereas coexisting hematite is linked to secondary oxidation. Geochemical modeling predicts that hydrothermal alteration of seafloor basalts by anoxic, sulfate-free seawater releases Fe(II) and P that simultaneously precipitate as greenalite and FAP upon venting. The formation, transport, and preservation of FAP nanoparticles indicate that seawater P concentrations were ≥1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than in modern deepwater. We speculate that Archean seafloor vents were nanoparticle "factories" that, on prebiotic Earth, produced countless Fe(II)- and P-rich templates available for catalysis and biosynthesis.

2.
Sci Adv ; 9(5): eadd7925, 2023 Feb 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36724225

RESUMO

Carbon is the key element of life, and its origin in ancient sedimentary rocks is central to questions about the emergence and early evolution of life. The oldest well-preserved carbon occurs with fossil-like structures in 3.5-billion-year-old black chert. The carbonaceous matter, which is associated with hydrothermal chert-barite vent systems originating in underlying basaltic-komatiitic lavas, is thought to be derived from microbial life. Here, we show that 3.5-billion-year-old black chert vein systems from the Pilbara Craton, Australia contain abundant residues of migrated organic carbon. Using younger analogs, we argue that the black cherts formed during precipitation from silica-rich, carbon-bearing hydrothermal fluids in vein systems and vent-proximal seafloor sediments. Given the volcanic setting and lack of organic-rich sediments, we speculate that the vent-mound systems contain carbon derived from rock-powered organic synthesis in the underlying mafic-ultramafic lavas, providing a glimpse of a prebiotic world awash in terrestrial organic compounds.

3.
Nature ; 484(7395): 498-501, 2012 Apr 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22538613

RESUMO

Iron formations are chemical sedimentary rocks comprising layers of iron-rich and silica-rich minerals whose deposition requires anoxic and iron-rich (ferruginous) sea water. Their demise after the rise in atmospheric oxygen by 2.32 billion years (Gyr) ago has been attributed to the removal of dissolved iron through progressive oxidation or sulphidation of the deep ocean. Therefore, a sudden return of voluminous iron formations nearly 500 million years later poses an apparent conundrum. Most late Palaeoproterozoic iron formations are about 1.88 Gyr old and occur in the Superior region of North America. Major iron formations are also preserved in Australia, but these were apparently deposited after the transition to a sulphidic ocean at 1.84 Gyr ago that should have terminated iron formation deposition, implying that they reflect local marine conditions. Here we date zircons in tuff layers to show that iron formations in the Frere Formation of Western Australia are about 1.88 Gyr old, indicating that the deposition of iron formations from two disparate cratons was coeval and probably reflects global ocean chemistry. The sudden reappearance of major iron formations at 1.88 Gyr ago--contemporaneous with peaks in global mafic-ultramafic magmatism, juvenile continental and oceanic crust formation, mantle depletion and volcanogenic massive sulphide formation--suggests deposition of iron formations as a consequence of major mantle activity and rapid crustal growth. Our findings support the idea that enhanced submarine volcanism and hydrothermal activity linked to a peak in mantle melting released large volumes of ferrous iron and other reductants that overwhelmed the sulphate and oxygen reservoirs of the ocean, decoupling atmospheric and seawater redox states, and causing the return of widespread ferruginous conditions. Iron formations formed on clastic-starved coastal shelves where dissolved iron upwelled and mixed with oxygenated surface water. The disappearance of iron formations after this event may reflect waning mafic-ultramafic magmatism and a diminished flux of hydrothermal iron relative to seawater oxidants.

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