INVITED: UNDERSTANDING PROTEROZOIC CARBON CYCLE EVOLUTION: IMPLICATIONS OF RESERVOIR SIZE
Time-dependent modeling suggests that a decreasing marine C reservoir size (Mo) through the Proterozoic also acted to increase sensitivity of the global isotopic system to biogeochemical perturbations. By examining patterns of isotopic change across individual excursions, this time-dependent model provides first-order constraints on Mo. Short-lived isotopic excursions marking the terminal Proterozoic are constrained to have lasted ~1 Myr, suggesting that Mo was unlikely to have been more than 2x present levels at the end of the Proterozoic. C-isotope excursions in the latter Mesoproterozoic and early Neoproterozoic, however, appear to record protracted recovery from a geologically instantaneous input of isotopically light C. This protracted recovery suggests that, by the latter Mesoproterozoic, Mo was at least 7-10x that of the modern ocean. Subdued isotopic variation recorded in older sedimentary successions suggests that Mo >10x modern levels characterized the earlier Proterozoic.
Finally, a single large C-isotope anomaly ~2.1 Ga stands out against this background. Not only does this excursion represent the largest recorded in Earth history, but it occurred when high Mo would be expected to have buffered the C-isotopic system against any but the largest perturbations. This excursion has been linked to initial atmosphere oxidation, yet other geochemical proxies (e.g., S-isotopes) indicate only minimal oxygenation of marine waters, suggesting a possible link between this excursion and lithospheric oxidation. In any case, this event may have marked the onset of the fundamental linkages between Corg burial and pO2 that characterize the modern carbon cycle.