4.4 Article

The late-stage ferruginization of the Ediacara Member (Rawnsley Quartzite, South Australia): Insights from uranium isotopes

Journal

GEOBIOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 35-48

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gbi.12262

Keywords

Australia; Ediacara Biota; Ediacaran Period; iron oxides; paleoenvironment

Funding

  1. NASA Exobiology program
  2. NSF-ELT program
  3. Alternative Earths NASA Astrobiology Institute
  4. NSF Earth Sciences Postdoctoral Fellowship
  5. National Geographic Society
  6. Australian Research Council Discovery program
  7. American Philosophical Society Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research in Astrobiology
  8. Division Of Earth Sciences
  9. Directorate For Geosciences [1452377] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The paleoenvironmental setting in which the Ediacara Biota lived, died, and was preserved in the eponymous Ediacara Member of the Rawnsley Quartzite of South Australia is an issue of long-standing interest and recent debate. Over the past few decades, interpretations have ranged from deep marine to shallow marine to terrestrial. One of the key features invoked by adherents of the terrestrial paleoenvironment hypothesis is the presence of iron oxide coatings, inferred to represent the upper horizons of paleosols, along fossiliferous sandstone beds of the Ediacara Member. We find that these surficial oxides are characterized by (U-234/U-238) values which are not in secular equilibrium, indicating extensive fluid-rich alteration of these surfaces within the past approximately 2million years. Specifically, the oxide coatings are characterized by (U-234/U-238) values >1, indicating interaction with high-(U-234/U-238) fluids derived from alpha-recoil discharge. These oxides are also characterized by light stable U-238/235 values, consistent with a groundwater U source. These U isotope data thus corroborate sedimentological observations that ferric oxides along fossiliferous surfaces of the Ediacara Member consist of surficial, non-bedform-parallel staining, and sharply irregular patches, strongly reflecting post-depositional, late-stage processes. Therefore, both sedimentological and geochemical evidence indicate that Ediacara iron oxides do not reflect synsedimentary ferruginization and that the presence of iron oxides cannot be used to either invoke a terrestrial paleoenvironmental setting for or reconstruct the taphonomic pathways responsible for preservation of the Ediacara Biota. These findings demonstrate that careful assessment of paleoenvironmental parameters is essential to the reconstruction of the habitat of the Ediacara Biota and the factors that led to the fossilization of these early complex ecosystems.

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