In situ S-isotope compositions of sulfate and sulfide from the 3.2 Ga Moodies Group, South Africa: A record of oxidative sulfur cycling

Publication date

2020-07

Authors

Nabhan, Sami
Marin-Carbonne, Johanna
Mason, Paul R.D.ISNI 0000000419421091
Heubeck, Christoph

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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taverne

Abstract

Sulfate minerals are rare in the Archean rock record and largely restricted to the occurrence of barite (BaSO4). The origin of this barite remains controversially debated. The mass-independent fractionation of sulfur isotopes in these and other Archean sedimentary rocks suggests that photolysis of volcanic aerosols in an oxygen-poor atmosphere played an important role in their formation. Here, we report on the multiple sulfur isotopic composition of sedimentary anhydrite in the ca. 3.22 Ga Moodies Group of the Barberton Greenstone Belt, southern Africa. Anhydrite occurs, together with barite and pyrite, in regionally traceable beds that formed in fluvial settings. Variable abundances of barite versus anhydrite reflect changes in sulfate enrichment by evaporitic concentration across orders of magnitude in an arid, nearshore terrestrial environment, periodically replenished by influxes of seawater. The multiple S-isotope compositions of anhydrite and pyrite are consistent with microbial sulfate reduction. S-isotope signatures in barite suggest an additional oxidative sulfate source probably derived from continental weathering of sulfide possibly enhanced by microbial sulfur oxidation. Although depositional environments of Moodies sulfate minerals differ strongly from marine barite deposits, their sulfur isotopic composition is similar and most likely reflects a primary isotopic signature. The data indicate that a constant input of small portions of oxidized sulfur from the continents into the ocean may have contributed to the observed long-term increase in Δ33Ssulfate values through the Paleoarchean.

Keywords

(Microbial) pyrite oxidation, Archean anhydrite, Archean sulfur cycle, microbial sulfate reduction, Taverne, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, General Environmental Science, General Earth and Planetary Sciences, SDG 14 - Life Below Water

Citation

Nabhan, S, Marin-Carbonne, J, Mason, P R D & Heubeck, C 2020, 'In situ S-isotope compositions of sulfate and sulfide from the 3.2 Ga Moodies Group, South Africa : A record of oxidative sulfur cycling', Geobiology, vol. 18, no. 4, pp. 426-444. https://doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12393