Modeling the Shuram δ13C Excursion as the onset of calcium carbonate
biomineralization by acritarchs
Abstract
The Shuram excursion, an extremely negative and prolonged carbonate δ13C
anomaly, is recorded globally in late Ediacaran shallow-water marine
sedimentary sequences and coincided with a time of increasing ocean
oxygenation. Marine planktonic microorganisms with organic cell walls,
known as acritarchs, were common in the Ediacaran Period. The onset of
the Shuram excursion occurred during a time of rapid acritarch cell wall
diversification, and the excursion’s resolution was followed by the
appearance of macroscopic calcium carbonate biomineralizing metazoans in
the late Ediacaran. Accordingly, I consider that the Shuram excursion
may be attributed to sedimentary accumulations of material sourced from
weakly calcified acritarchs, which primitively biomineralized their cell
walls by precipitating 13C-enriched marine carbonate onto 13C-depleted
organic carbon. Decay of this organic carbon to authigenic carbonate
after burial may have produced the low δ13Ccarb values. The carbon
isotope mass balance of global carbon cycle reservoirs permits this
effect to produce a Shuram excursion of any duration. An initial organic
fraction of ~0.6 is required in the acritarch-derived
phase, in agreement with fossil evidence that the earliest
biomineralized structures contained a major fraction of organic carbon.
I will discuss how fossil, petrographic and geochemical observations are
consistent with this hypothesis. During the excursion, a peak globally
averaged organic carbon burial fraction of ~0.4 is
predicted. Burial sequestration of organic carbon in organic-rich
biomineralized calcium carbonate could account for the rise in oxygen
associated with the Shuram excursion.