TY - JOUR
T1 - Sedimentology, chemostratigraphy, and stromatolites of lower Paleoproterozoic carbonates, Turee Creek Group, Western Australia
AU - Martindale, Rowan C.
AU - Strauss, Justin V.
AU - Sperling, Erik A.
AU - Johnson, Jena E.
AU - Van Kranendonk, Martin J.
AU - Flannery, David
AU - French, Katherine
AU - Lepot, Kevin
AU - Mazumder, Rajat
AU - Rice, Melissa S.
AU - Schrag, Daniel P.
AU - Summons, Roger
AU - Walter, Malcolm
AU - Abelson, John
AU - Knoll, Andrew H.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank R. Shapiro and an anonymous reviewer for constructive comments on an earlier version of this paper. We thank the Agouron Institute for funding the 2012 Advanced Geobiology Course to Australia, Henry Goodall and Guy L’Estrange for logistical support, and Sarah Manley for running the carbon isotope analyses. R. Martindale thanks Dr. A. H. Knoll and the NASA Astrobiological Institute Contract NNA13AA90A for providing postdoctoral funding. J. Strauss and K. French acknowledge NSF graduate research fellowships for funding support. E. Sperling thanks the Agouron Institute for an Agouron Postdoctoral Fellowship. D. Flannery was supported by the University of New South Wales and the Australian Centre for Astrobiology. M. Walter acknowledges a Professorial Fellowship from the Australian Research Council. R. Mazumder is grateful to the University of New South Wales and Agouron Institute for support. M. Van Kranendonk also acknowledges funding support from the University of New South Wales grant #SPF01 PS27782 . R. Summons and A. Knoll thank the NASA Astrobiology Institute (Grant #NNA13AA90A ). R. Summons was also supported by the NSF program on Frontiers of Earth Science Dynamics.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2015/9/1
Y1 - 2015/9/1
N2 - The ca. 2.45-2.22. Ga Turee Creek Group, Western Australia, contains carbonate-rich horizons that postdate earliest Proterozoic iron formations, bracket both Paleoproterozoic glaciogenic beds and the onset of the Great Oxidation Event (GOE), and predate ca. 2.2-2.05. Ga Lomagundi-Jatuli C-isotopic excursion(s). As such, Turee Creek carbonate strata provide an opportunity to characterize early Paleoproterozoic carbonate sedimentation and carbon cycle dynamics in the context of significant global change. Here, we report on the stratigraphy, sedimentology, petrology, carbon isotope chemostratigraphy, and stromatolite development for carbonate-rich successions within the pre-glacial part of the Kungarra Formation and the postglacial Kazput Formation.Kungarra carbonate units largely occur as laterally discontinuous beds within a thick, predominantly siliciclastic shelf deposit. While this succession contains thin microbialite horizons, most carbonates consist of patchy calcite overgrowths within a siliciclastic matrix. C-isotopic values show marked variation along a single horizon and even within hand samples, reflecting spatially and temporally variable mixing between dissolved inorganic carbon in seawater and isotopically light inorganic carbon generated via syn- and post-depositional remineralization of organic matter.In contrast, the Kazput carbonates consist of subtidal stromatolites, grainstones, and micrites deposited on a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic shelf. These carbonates exhibit moderate δ13C values of -2‰ to +1.5‰ and likely preserve a C-isotopic signature of seawater. Kazput carbonates, thus, provide some of the best available evidence that an interval of unexceptional C-isotopic values separates the Lomagundi-Jatuli C-isotopic excursion(s) from the initiation of the GOE as inferred from multiple sulfur isotopes (loss of mass independent fractionation). The Kazput Formation also contains unusual, m-scale stromatolitic buildups, which are composed of sub-mm laminae and discontinuous, convex upward lenticular precipitates up to a few mm in maximum thickness. Laminae, interpreted as microbial mat layers, contain quartz and clay minerals as well as calcite, whereas precipitate lenses consist of interlocking calcite anhedra, sometimes showing faint mm-scale banding. These cements formed either as infillings of primary voids formed by gas emission within penecontemporaneously lithified mats, or as local seafloor precipitates that formed on, or within, surface mats. It is possible that both mechanisms interacted to form the unique Kazput stromatolites. These microbialites speak to a distinctive interaction between life and environment early in the Paleoproterozoic Era.
AB - The ca. 2.45-2.22. Ga Turee Creek Group, Western Australia, contains carbonate-rich horizons that postdate earliest Proterozoic iron formations, bracket both Paleoproterozoic glaciogenic beds and the onset of the Great Oxidation Event (GOE), and predate ca. 2.2-2.05. Ga Lomagundi-Jatuli C-isotopic excursion(s). As such, Turee Creek carbonate strata provide an opportunity to characterize early Paleoproterozoic carbonate sedimentation and carbon cycle dynamics in the context of significant global change. Here, we report on the stratigraphy, sedimentology, petrology, carbon isotope chemostratigraphy, and stromatolite development for carbonate-rich successions within the pre-glacial part of the Kungarra Formation and the postglacial Kazput Formation.Kungarra carbonate units largely occur as laterally discontinuous beds within a thick, predominantly siliciclastic shelf deposit. While this succession contains thin microbialite horizons, most carbonates consist of patchy calcite overgrowths within a siliciclastic matrix. C-isotopic values show marked variation along a single horizon and even within hand samples, reflecting spatially and temporally variable mixing between dissolved inorganic carbon in seawater and isotopically light inorganic carbon generated via syn- and post-depositional remineralization of organic matter.In contrast, the Kazput carbonates consist of subtidal stromatolites, grainstones, and micrites deposited on a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic shelf. These carbonates exhibit moderate δ13C values of -2‰ to +1.5‰ and likely preserve a C-isotopic signature of seawater. Kazput carbonates, thus, provide some of the best available evidence that an interval of unexceptional C-isotopic values separates the Lomagundi-Jatuli C-isotopic excursion(s) from the initiation of the GOE as inferred from multiple sulfur isotopes (loss of mass independent fractionation). The Kazput Formation also contains unusual, m-scale stromatolitic buildups, which are composed of sub-mm laminae and discontinuous, convex upward lenticular precipitates up to a few mm in maximum thickness. Laminae, interpreted as microbial mat layers, contain quartz and clay minerals as well as calcite, whereas precipitate lenses consist of interlocking calcite anhedra, sometimes showing faint mm-scale banding. These cements formed either as infillings of primary voids formed by gas emission within penecontemporaneously lithified mats, or as local seafloor precipitates that formed on, or within, surface mats. It is possible that both mechanisms interacted to form the unique Kazput stromatolites. These microbialites speak to a distinctive interaction between life and environment early in the Paleoproterozoic Era.
KW - Great Oxidation Event
KW - Kazput Formation
KW - Kungarra Formation
KW - Lomagundi-Jatuli event
KW - Stromatolite
KW - Turee Creek Group
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U2 - 10.1016/j.precamres.2015.05.021
DO - 10.1016/j.precamres.2015.05.021
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84930672794
SN - 0301-9268
VL - 266
SP - 194
EP - 211
JO - Precambrian Research
JF - Precambrian Research
ER -