2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 1
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM

ABRUPT ONSET OF SUBAERIAL VOLCANISM AND THE RISE OF ATMOSPHERIC OXYGEN


KUMP, Lee R., Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802 and BARLEY, Mark E., School of Earth and Geographical Sciences, The Univ of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, 6009, Australia, lkump@psu.edu

The simple hypothesis that the establishment of an oxygen-rich atmosphere ~2.4 billion years ago occurred when oxygen-producing cyanobacteria evolved is arguably contradicted by abundant biomarker evidence for their presence in rocks 300-million years older. Given the event's coincidence with the transition from the Archean to the Proterozoic Eons, a cause-and-effect relationship with the defining tectonic change (the stabilization of continental cratons) seems likely. A shift in the locus of volcanism from largely submarine to a mix of submarine and subaerial is here argued to be the primary cause. This shift would have been accompanied by a significant reduction in the sink for oxygen provided by reduced volcanic gases: Archean submarine volcanoes emitted molecular hydrogen in excess, allowing H2 to accumulate in the atmosphere and prevent the buildup of oxygen, whereas Proterozoic subaerial/submarine volcanoes did not, so oxygen came to dominate atmospheric composition.