Giving some tooth to Precambrian carbonates and the tales they tell
about ancient oceans
Abstract
Enigmatic is a word that often comes up in discussions about Proterozoic
molar tooth carbonate structures (MTS). But when unusual features such
as these are common in rocks of a particular age, there is almost always
an important message waiting to be discovered. In this case, the
observed temporal patterns for MTS likely track first-order trends in
evolving compositions in the oceans during Earth’s middle history when
CO2 in the atmosphere and carbonate saturation in the ocean were high
but declining and oxygen (O2) in the ocean-atmosphere system was on the
rise. A new paper by Tang et al. (this volume) gives us a new way to
think about MTS origins, and nested within their model are wide ranging
implicit and explicit linkages to Earth surface evolution as life was
becoming more complex in a slow march toward the world we know today.