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The geologic history of seawater oxygen isotopes from marine iron oxides
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Citations
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References
2019
Year
The oxygen isotope composition (δ<sup>18</sup>O) of marine sedimentary rocks has increased by 10 to 15 per mil since Archean time. Interpretation of this trend is hindered by the dual control of temperature and fluid δ<sup>18</sup>O on the rocks' isotopic composition. A new δ<sup>18</sup>O record in marine iron oxides covering the past ~2000 million years shows a similar secular rise. Iron oxide precipitation experiments reveal a weakly temperature-dependent iron oxide-water oxygen isotope fractionation, suggesting that increasing seawater δ<sup>18</sup>O over time was the primary cause of the long-term rise in δ<sup>18</sup>O values of marine precipitates. The <sup>18</sup>O enrichment may have been driven by an increase in terrestrial sediment cover, a change in the proportion of high- and low-temperature crustal alteration, or a combination of these and other factors.
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