DOI: 10.1126/Science.1183325 , 1241 (2010); 327 Science Et Al. Francis A. Macdonald, Calibrating the Cryogenian

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DOI: 10.1126/Science.1183325 , 1241 (2010); 327 Science Et Al. Francis A. Macdonald, Calibrating the Cryogenian Calibrating the Cryogenian Francis A. Macdonald, et al. Science 327, 1241 (2010); DOI: 10.1126/science.1183325 This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. If you wish to distribute this article to others, you can order high-quality copies for your colleagues, clients, or customers by clicking here. Permission to republish or repurpose articles or portions of articles can be obtained by following the guidelines here. The following resources related to this article are available online at www.sciencemag.org (this information is current as of March 4, 2010 ): Updated information and services, including high-resolution figures, can be found in the online version of this article at: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/327/5970/1241 Supporting Online Material can be found at: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/327/5970/1241/DC1 This article cites 25 articles, 9 of which can be accessed for free: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/327/5970/1241#otherarticles on March 4, 2010 This article appears in the following subject collections: Geochemistry, Geophysics http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/collection/geochem_phys www.sciencemag.org Downloaded from Science (print ISSN 0036-8075; online ISSN 1095-9203) is published weekly, except the last week in December, by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1200 New York Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20005. Copyright 2010 by the American Association for the Advancement of Science; all rights reserved. The title Science is a registered trademark of AAAS. REPORTS (636.3 T 4.9 Ma) (8), which underlies the cap Calibrating the Cryogenian carbonate of the basal Doushantuo Formation (635.2 T 0.2 Ma) (9); and other glacial deposits Francis A. Macdonald,1* Mark D. Schmitz,2 James L. Crowley,2 Charles F. Roots,3 David S. Jones,4 around the globe, including the Ice Brook Adam C. Maloof,5 Justin V. Strauss,6 Phoebe A. Cohen,1 David T. Johnston,1 Daniel P. Schrag1 Formation in northwestern Canada (10). In contrast, a paucity of robust paleomagnetic The Neoproterozoic was an era of great environmental and biological change, but a paucity of direct poles and precise age constraints from volcanic and precise age constraints on strata from this time has prevented the complete integration of rocks directly interbedded with early Cryo- these records. We present four high-precision U-Pb ages for Neoproterozoic rocks in northwestern genian glacial deposits has precluded tests of Canada that constrain large perturbations in the carbon cycle, a major diversification and depletion in the snowball Earth hypothesis for the Sturtian the microfossil record, and the onset of the Sturtian glaciation. A volcanic tuff interbedded with glaciation. The global nature of the Sturtian Sturtian glacial deposits, dated at 716.5 million years ago, is synchronous with the age of the Franklin glaciation has been inferred from the ubiquitous large igneous province and paleomagnetic poles that pin Laurentia to an equatorial position. Ice occurrence of glacial deposits that are strati- was therefore grounded below sea level at very low paleolatitudes, which implies that the Sturtian graphically below Marinoan diamictite units (10) glaciation was global in extent. as well as banded iron formation within these deposits (1). iddle Neoproterozoic or Cryogenian better understanding of the nature and interrela- We present four high-precision U-Pb isotope strata [850 to 635 million years ago tionships of these events. Several first-order dilution–thermal ionization mass spectrometry M(Ma)] contain evidence for the breakup questions remain: How many Neoproterozoic (ID-TIMS) dates from intrusive and volcanic of the supercontinent Rodinia, widespread glaciations were there? How were they triggered? rocks within Neoproterozoic strata of northwest- glaciation (1, 2), high-amplitude fluctuations in What was their duration and extent? How did ern Canada. These dates, coupled with high- geochemical proxy records (3), and the radiation the biosphere respond? Answers to all of these resolution d13C profiles (11), allow us to of early eukaryotes (4); however, both relative questions hinge on our ability to precisely synthesize Cryogenian geological, geochemical, and absolute age uncertainties have precluded a correlate and calibrate data from disparate paleomagnetic, and paleontological data both stratigraphic records around the world. regionally and globally. The accurate integration 1 The snowball Earth hypothesis (1, 2)was of these records places hard constraints on the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard on March 4, 2010 University,Cambridge,MA02138,USA.2Department of developed in response to strong paleomagnetic timing and extent of the Sturtian glaciation and Geosciences, Boise State University, Boise, ID 83725, USA. evidence for low-latitude glaciation from the its relationship to the Franklin large igneous 3Geological Survey of Canada, Whitehorse, YT YIA 1B5, Elatina Formation in Australia (5, 6). The Elatina province (LIP) and the Cryogenian microfossil 4 Canada. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Wash- Formation and its distinct cap carbonate have record. ington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA. 5Department of Geosciences, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA. been correlated with chemo- and lithostratigra- Neoproterozoic strata are exposed in ero- 6555 East Simpson Street, Jackson, WY 83001, USA. phy to Marinoan-age glacial deposits in the sional windows (inliers) through Paleozoic *To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Ghaub Formation in Namibia (635.5 T 0.6 Ma) carbonate rocks in northwestern Canada for [email protected] (7); the Nantuo Formation in South China more than 1500 km, from the Alaska border www.sciencemag.org Downloaded from Fig. 1. Composite chemo- and lithostratigraphy of Neoproterozoic strata in northwestern Canada, including the Upper and Lower Tindir Groups (13), the Fifteenmile and Lower Mount Harper Group (table S2), the Little Dal Group (3), the Coates Lake Group (table S2), the Twitya Formation (3), and the Shaler Supergroup (18). Shaded area represents the Bitter Springs isotopic stage (3). www.sciencemag.org SCIENCE VOL 327 5 MARCH 2010 1241 REPORTS east through the Ogilvie and Wernecke Mountains This geochronology reveals the >3000-km glaciation (24, 25). Thus, we conclude that the of Yukon, to the Mackenzie Mountains of the extent of the Franklin LIP (~716.5 Ma), from Sturtian glaciation at ~716.5 Ma was global in Northwest Territories, and north to Victoria the Yukon-Alaska border to Ellesmere Island, nature. Island of Nunavut (fig. S1A). Exposures in the where mafic dikes have been dated at 716 T It is uncertain whether the Sturtian glacial Coal Creek inlier of the central Ogilvie Moun- 1Ma(20). Although no evidence for prevol- epoch consisted of one discrete glaciation that tains consist of mixed carbonate and siliciclastic canic extension and rifting is present on Victoria lasted tens of millions of years, or multiple gla- rocks of the upper Fifteenmile and Lower Island (21), conspicuous normal faulting exists cial episodes including the low-latitude glacia- Mount Harper Groups (LMHG), bimodal vol- within the LMHG and the lower suite of the tion at ~716.5 Ma. Prior to this study, minimum canic rocks of the Mount Harper volcanic MHVC (12), temporally linking the Franklin and maximum age constraints on the Sturtian complex (MHVC) (12), and glacial diamictite LIP to extension on the northwestern Laurentian glaciation were provided by a sample from of the Upper Mount Harper Group (UMHG) margin. South China dated at 662.9 T 4.3 Ma (26)and (Fig. 1). A glacial origin for the UMHG is Several paleomagnetic studies on strongly the Leger Granite in Oman dated at 726 T 1Ma inferred from bed-penetrating dropstones with magnetized mafic dikes, sills, and lavas have (27), respectively. We suggest that our age from impact margins and outsized clasts in fine, demonstrated that the Franklin LIP was em- member D of the MHVC, 717.43 T 0.14 Ma, laminated beds, and by striated clasts in placed when northwestern Laurentia was within provides a maximum age constraint on the low- exposures in the Hart River inlier of the eastern 10° of the equator (6, 22, 23). The dated sill and latitude Sturtian glaciation not only because Ogilvie Mountains (fig. S2). Evidence for the sediments that it intrudes on Victoria Island glacial deposits have not been identified below grounded ice is provided by glacial push yield paleomagnetic data that are consistent with member D, but also because models suggest structures and soft-sedimentary deformation the previous low-latitude results (18). The age extremely rapid ice advance once ice is below (fig. S2). The UMHG and the iron-rich unit 2 of the tuff interbedded with glacial deposits of 30° latitude (24, 25), such that glaciation of equa- of the Upper Tindir Group in the western Ogilvie the UMHC, 716.47 T 0.24 Ma, is indistin- torial latitudes should be synchronous around Mountains are correlative with the Sturtian-age guishable from the date of the Franklin LIP, the globe. Evidence for a pre-Sturtian glaciation Sayunei Formation of the Rapitan Group in the 716.33 T 0.54 Ma. Therefore, grounded ice was at ~750 Ma (referred to as the Kaigas glaciation) Mackenzie Mountains (13, 14). The broad present on the northwestern margin of Laurentia was reported in southern Namibia (28), Zambia distribution of massive diamictite and stratified at ~716.5 Ma, when it was situated at equatorial (29), and northwestern China (30). However, at glacial deposits with coarse-grained ice-rafted latitudes. Climate models have long predicted these localities the contact relationship of the debris in the Rapitan Group of the Northwest that if the ice line advanced equatorward of ~30° purported glacial deposit with the dated unit on March 4, 2010 Territories (14, 15) and its correlatives in Yukon to 40°, an ice-albedo feedback would drive global and the glacial origin of the deposit are sus- and Alaska (fig.
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