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Creators/Authors contains: "Kaufman, Alan J"

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  1. The snowball Earth hypothesis predicts that continental chemical weathering diminished substantially during, but rebounded strongly after, the Marinoan ice age some 635 Mya. Defrosting the planet would result in a plume of fresh glacial meltwater with a different chemical composition from underlying hypersaline seawater, generating both vertical and lateral salinity gradients. Here, we test the plumeworld hypothesis using lithium isotope compositions in the Ediacaran Doushantuo cap dolostone that accumulated in the aftermath of the Marinoan snowball Earth along a proximal–distal (nearshore–offshore) transect in South China. Our data show an overall decreasing δ7Li trend with distance from the shoreline, consistent with the variable mixing of a meltwater plume with high δ7Li (due to incongruent silicate weathering on the continent) and hypersaline seawater with low δ7Li (due to synglacial distillation). The evolution of low δ7Li of synglacial seawater, as opposed to the modern oceans with high δ7Li, was likely driven by weak continental chemical weathering coupled with strong reverse weathering on the seafloor underneath silica-rich oceans. The spatial pattern of δ7Li is also consistent with the development and then collapse of the meltwater plume that occurred at the time scale of cap dolostone accumulation. Therefore, the δ7Li data are consistent with the plumeworld hypothesis, considerably reduced chemical weathering on the continent during the Marinoan snowball Earth, and enhanced reverse weathering on the seafloor of Precambrian oceans. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 12, 2025
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 13, 2025
  3. The Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE; ~183 Mya) was a globally significant carbon-cycle perturbation linked to widespread deposition of organic-rich sediments, massive volcanic CO2release, marine faunal extinction, sea-level rise, a crisis in carbonate production related to ocean acidification, and elevated seawater temperatures. Despite recognition of the T-OAE as a potential analog for future ocean deoxygenation, current knowledge on the severity of global ocean anoxia is limited largely to studies of the trace element and isotopic composition of black shales, which are commonly affected by local processes. Here, we present the first carbonate-based uranium isotope (δ238U) record of the T-OAE from open marine platform limestones of the southeastern Tethys Ocean as a proxy for global seawater redox conditions. A significant negative δ238U excursion (~0.4‰) is recorded just prior to the onset of the negative carbon isotope excursion comprised within the T-OAE, followed by a long-lived recovery of δ238U values, thus confirming that the T-OAE represents a global expansion of marine anoxia. Using a Bayesian inverse isotopic mass balance model, we estimate that anoxic waters covered ~6 to 8% of the global seafloor during the peak of the T-OAE, which represents 28 to 38 times the extent of anoxia in the modern ocean. These data, combined with δ238U-based estimates of seafloor anoxic area for other CO2-driven Phanerozoic OAEs, suggest a common response of ocean anoxia to carbon release, thus improving prediction of future anthropogenically induced ocean deoxygenation. 
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  4. While molecular clock studies suggest a Tonian-Cryogenian (~800–635 Ma) emergence of the Porifera, convincing fossil evidence of sponges is seen only as far back as ~530 Ma. The >100 Ma lacuna for sponges represents a critical missing piece of the Neoproterozoic puzzle. Assembling an evolutionary framework requires that Poriferan antiquity be understood in terms of sponge form and function, and the emergence of suspension-feeding amid profound environmental and climatic change. Here we report newly discovered biomineralized fossils of sponge-grade animals in Neoproterozoic carbonates of Siberia, Australia, and Brazil. Using a wide range of petrographic, eProbe, µXRF, µCT, and serial grinding techniques, the sponge-grade fossils are shown to be remarkably preserved in three dimensions, displaying broad morphological characters associated with early experiments in biomineralization such as siliceous spicules and external carbonate shells. Reconstructions of their bauplan reveal forms evolutionarily equipped for a suspensionfeeding lifestyle, well-prepared for pumping seawater through their bodies. As ecosystem engineers that clarified the water column and allowed for greater depths of photosynthetic activity, the emergence (and dominance) of sponge-grade animals in shallow marine carbonate reefs had the potential to drive environmental change that is arguably recorded during extremes in the Neoproterozoic carbon cycle. With their global distribution, these animals would link the planktic and benthic realms for the first time in Earth history and represent a sink for the photosynthetically derived organic matter that impacted the oxidation state of the oceans and atmosphere. Notably, most of these fossils are archived in carbonates preserving global expressions of profoundly negative δ13C perturbations. These include the Ediacaran Period Shuram Excursion, which foreshadowed the widespread appearance of the Ediacara biota, and the terminal Cryogenian Period Trezona Anomaly, which immediately preceded the Marinoan snowball Earth. 
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  5. We apply a recently developed measurement technique for methane (CH4) isotopologues* (isotopic variants of CH4—13CH4, 12CH3D, 13CH3D, and 12CH2D2) to identify contributions to the atmospheric burden from fossil fuel and microbial sources. The aim of this study is to constrain factors that ultimately control the concentration of this potent greenhouse gas on global, regional, and local levels. While predictions of atmospheric methane isotopologues have been modeled, we present direct measurements that point to a different atmospheric methane composition and to a microbial flux with less clumping (greater deficits relative to stochastic) in both 13CH3D and 12CH2D2 than had been previously assigned. These differences make atmospheric isotopologue data sufficiently sensitive to variations in microbial to fossil fuel fluxes to distinguish between emissions scenarios such as those generated by different versions of EDGAR (the Emissions Database for Global Atmospheric Research), even when existing constraints on the atmospheric CH4 concentration profile as well as traditional isotopes are kept constant. 
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  6. null (Ed.)