Geological evolution of the marine selenium cycle: Insights from the bulk shale δ82/76Se record and isotope mass balance modeling

Publication date

2016-05-01

Authors

Mitchell, KirstenISNI 000000052424041X
Mansoor, Sannan Z.
Mason, PaulISNI 0000000419421091
Johnson, Thomas M.
Van Cappellen, PhilippeISNI 0000000397176442

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Bulk δ82/76Se values of representative marine shales from the Paleoarchean to the present day vary between approximately -3 and +3‰ with only local deviations beyond this range. This muted Se isotope variability in the shale record contrasts with the relatively large fractionations associated with abiotic and microbial Se oxyanion reduction seen in experimental studies. Long-term temporal trends in the bulk shale data do not directly correlate with changes in redox conditions of the global ocean, although a minor but significant shift towards more negative formation-averaged δ82/76Se values appears to track oxygenation of the deep ocean at the end of the Proterozoic. We hypothesize that extensive δ82/76Se variability in the shale data was suppressed due to the early emergence of biological assimilatory uptake and the resulting persistence of low seawater Se concentrations, coupled with small authigenic Se outputs throughout most of geological time. In the modern ocean, Se is an essential micronutrient with a relatively short residence time of about 11,500 yrs. The marine Se cycle is dominated by assimilation into biomass and subsequent recycling in the water column and surface sediments, i.e. processes that result in only minimal isotopic fractionation. We suggest that similar processes dominated back through the geological record to Archean times. Our model shows that paleoceanographic information could in principle be extracted from proxy data on the Se isotopic composition of seawater, once isotopic differences can be readily discerned between individual sedimentary Se pools.

Keywords

Geological evolution, Isotopic mass balance modeling, Marine biogeochemical cycling, Selenium, Stable isotopes, Taverne, Geochemistry and Petrology, Geophysics, Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous), Space and Planetary Science

Citation

Mitchell, K, Mansoor, S Z, Mason, P R D, Johnson, T M & Van Cappellen, P 2016, 'Geological evolution of the marine selenium cycle : Insights from the bulk shale δ 82/76 Se record and isotope mass balance modeling', Earth and Planetary Science Letters, vol. 441, pp. 178-187. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2016.02.030