Atmospheric oxygen abundance, marine nutrient availability, and organic
carbon fluxes to the seafloor
Abstract
The global-scale oxygenation of Earth’s surface represents one of the
most fundamental chemical transformations in our planet’s history. There
is empirical and theoretical evidence for at least two distinct and
stable regimes of Earth surface oxygenation—a ‘low-O2
world’ characterized by pervasively reducing deep ocean waters, and a
‘high-O2 world’ with dominantly well-oxygenated deep
ocean waters represented by our modern surface environment. Numerous
biogeochemical processes and feedbacks control the redox state of the
marine system, particularly when considered globally and on geologic
timescales. It has therefore proven challenging to provide quantitative
and internally consistent estimates of the atmospheric oxygen levels
(and thereby, productivity, nutrient availability, and reductant
consumption) necessary to oxygenate the deep seas. Here, we leverage an
Earth-system biogeochemical model that tracks the carbon, nitrogen,
oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur cycles (CANOPS) to provide new
quantitative constraints on this relationship. We explore ocean
biogeochemistry and fluxes of reduced carbon to the seafloor across a
wide range of atmospheric oxygen levels from 0.01 – 100% of the
present atmospheric level (PAL), and implement a stochastic approach to
provide formal estimates of uncertainty on our results. We find that
deep ocean waters remain largely reducing, and ocean productivity
remains significantly muted relative to the modern marine biosphere,
until pO2 levels reach ~40% PAL.
These results have major implications for quantitative constraints on
atmospheric pO2 levels during the latest
Proterozoic and Paleozoic, both in terms of environmental habitability
for early animals and with respect to potential energetic constraints on
growing and diversifying benthic communities.