Publications by authors named "Ganqing Jiang"

Article Synopsis
  • The snowball Earth hypothesis suggests that during the Marinoan ice age around 635 million years ago, continental chemical weathering was greatly reduced but then increased afterward.
  • Research conducted on lithium isotope compositions in rock layers from South China shows a distinct trend of decreasing lithium levels as distance from the shore increases, indicating the mixing of meltwater and hypersaline seawater.
  • The findings support the idea that during this period, weak weathering on land and strong reverse weathering on the ocean floor influenced the chemistry of the oceans, aligning with the plumeworld hypothesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

SignificanceEarth system's response to major perturbations is of paramount interest. On the basis of multiple isotope compositions for pyrite, carbonate-associated sulfate, carbonates, and organics within, we inferred that the much-debated, enigmatic, extremely C-depleted calcite cements in the ∼635-Ma cap carbonates in South China preserve geochemical evidence for marine microbial sulfate reduction coupled to anaerobic oxidation of methane. This interpretation implies the existence of a brief interval of modern-level marine sulfate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Earth's most severe ice ages interrupted a crucial interval in eukaryotic evolution with widespread ice coverage during the Cryogenian Period (720 to 635 Ma). Aerobic eukaryotes must have survived the "Snowball Earth" glaciations, requiring the persistence of oxygenated marine habitats, yet evidence for these environments is lacking. We examine iron formations within globally distributed Cryogenian glacial successions to reconstruct the redox state of the synglacial oceans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

During Cambrian Stage 4 (~514 Ma) the oceans were widely populated with endemic trilobites and three major faunas can be distinguished: olenellids, redlichiids, and paradoxidids. The lower-middle Cambrian boundary in Laurentia was based on the first major trilobite extinction event that is known as the Olenellid Biomere boundary. However, international correlation across this boundary (the Cambrian Series 2-Series 3 boundary) has been a challenge since the formal proposal of a four-series subdivision of the Cambrian System in 2005.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Banded iron formations were a prevalent feature of marine sedimentation ~3.8-1.8 billion years ago and they provide key evidence for ferruginous oceans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An important innovation in the geosciences is the astronomical time scale. The astronomical time scale is based on the Milankovitch-forced stratigraphy that has been calibrated to astronomical models of paleoclimate forcing; it is defined for much of Cenozoic-Mesozoic. For the Palaeozoic era, however, astronomical forcing has not been widely explored because of lack of high-precision geochronology or astronomical modelling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Metazoans are likely to have their roots in the Cryogenian period, but there is a marked increase in the appearance of novel animal and algae fossils shortly after the termination of the late Cryogenian (Marinoan) glaciation about 635 million years ago. It has been suggested that an oxygenation event in the wake of the severe Marinoan glaciation was the driving factor behind this early diversification of metazoans and the shift in ecosystem complexity. But there is little evidence for an increase in oceanic or atmospheric oxygen following the Marinoan glaciation, or for a direct link between early animal evolution and redox conditions in general.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The clay mineralogy of the Doushantuo Formation in South China is analyzed to understand paleoclimatic conditions of the Ediacaran period where the earliest animal fossils were found.
  • The dominant clay minerals identified are trioctahedral smectite (saponite) and its diagenetic products, indicating an early diagenetic process occurring under alkaline conditions.
  • The unique presence of saponite in the Yangtze Gorges area, absent in nearby regions, suggests localized alkaline environments, which may have supported early animal life, including significant fossil discoveries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent geochemical data from Oman, Newfoundland, and the western United States suggest that long-term oxidation of Ediacaran oceans resulted in progressive depletion of a large dissolved organic carbon (DOC) reservoir and potentially triggered the radiation of acanthomorphic acritarchs, algae, macroscopic Ediacara organisms, and, subsequently, motile bilaterian animals. However, the hypothesized coupling between ocean oxidation and evolution is contingent on the reliability of continuous geochemical and paleontological data in individual sections and of intercontinental correlations. Here we report high-resolution geochemical data from the fossil-rich Doushantuo Formation (635-551 Ma) in South China that confirm trends from other broadly equivalent sections and highlight key features that have not been observed in most sections or have received little attention.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Earth's most severe glaciations are thought to have occurred about 600 million years ago, in the late Neoproterozoic era. A puzzling feature of glacial deposits from this interval is that they are overlain by 1-5-m-thick 'cap carbonates' (particulate deep-water marine carbonate rocks) associated with a prominent negative carbon isotope excursion. Cap carbonates have been controversially ascribed to the aftermath of almost complete shutdown of the ocean ecosystems for millions of years during such ice ages--the 'snowball Earth' hypothesis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF