University of Exeter – June 19, 2019 --
The quest to discover what drove one of the most important evolutionary events
in the history of life on Earth has taken a new, fascinating twist.
A team of scientists have given a fresh
insight into what may have driven the “Cambrian Explosion” – a period of rapid
expansion of different forms of animal life that occurred over 500 million
years ago.
While a number of theories have been
put forward to explain this landmark period, the most credible is that it was
fuelled by a significant rise in oxygen levels which allowed a wide variety of
animals to thrive.
The new study suggests that such a rise
in oxygen levels was the result of extraordinary changes in global plate
tectonics.
During the formation of the
supercontinent ‘Gondwana’, there was a major increase in continental arc
volcanism – chains of volcanoes often thousands of miles long formed where
continental and oceanic tectonic plates collided. This in turn led to increased
‘degassing’ of CO2 from ancient, subducted sedimentary rocks.
This, the team calculated, led to an
increase in atmospheric CO2 and warming of the planet, which in turn amplified
the weathering of continental rocks, which supplied the nutrient phosphorus to
the ocean to drive photosynthesis and oxygen production.
The study was led by Josh Williams, who
began the research as an MSc student at the University
of Exeter and is now studying for a
PhD at the University
of Edinburgh . During his
MSc project he used a sophisticated biogeochemical model to make the first
quantification of changes in atmospheric oxygen levels just prior to this
explosion of life.
Co-author and project supervisor
Professor Tim Lenton, from the University
of Exeter ’s Global Systems Institute
said: “One of the great dilemmas originally recognised by Darwin is why complex life, in the form of
fossil animals, appeared so abruptly in what is now known as the Cambrian
explosion.
“Many studies have suggested this was linked
to a rise in oxygen levels – but without a clear cause for such a rise, or any
attempt to quantify it.”
Not only did the model predict a marked
rise in oxygen levels due to changes in plate tectonic activity, but that rise
in oxygen – to about a quarter of the level in today’s atmosphere – crossed the
critical levels estimated to be needed by the animals seen in the Cambrian
explosion.
Williams added: “What is particularly
compelling about this research is that not only does the model predict a rise in
oxygen to levels estimated to be necessary to support the large, mobile,
predatory animal life of the Cambrian, but the model predictions also show
strong agreement with existing geochemical evidence."
“It is remarkable to think that our
oldest animal ancestors - and therefore all of us - may owe our existence, in
part, to an unusual episode of plate tectonics over half a billion years ago”
said Professor Lenton. A tectonically
driven Ediacaran oxygenation event by Joshua Williams, Benjamin Mills and Tim Lenton is published in Nature Communications on Wednesday, June
19th 2019
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