The Canfield Ocean model was proposed by Geochemistry Donald Canfield to explain the composition of the ocean in the middle to late Proterozoic.
History
In a paper published in 1998 in
Nature,
Canfield argued that the deep ocean was
Ocean anoxia and
Hydrogen sulfide (also known as
Euxinia) during the time of the
Boring Billion (1.80.8 billion years ago (Gya)), and that those conditions ceased the mineral deposition of iron-rich banded iron formations (BIF) in ocean sediments. Prior to the Canfield Ocean theory, it was believed that the ocean becoming fully oxygenated during the Great Oxidation Event (GOE; ~2.46 Gya) was the mechanism that ceased BIF deposition.
Formation
By the end of the GOE, oxygen levels in the atmosphere were as high as 10% of present-day levels.
Under these conditions, the deep ocean would have likely remained anoxic. However, the atmosphere had enough oxygen to facilitate
weathering of sulfate-containing terrestrial minerals, delivering
sulfate (SO
42-) to the ocean through runoff.
Sulfate was then reduced by microorganisms to produce
hydrogen sulfide (H
2S):
2CH2O + SO4^2- -> H2S + 2HCO3^-
By 1.8 Gya, sulfide (S2-) concentrations were high enough to precipitate iron out of the deep ocean by binding with iron to form pyrite (FeS2), effectively ending the formation of BIFs.
Evidence
Most evidence for euxinic ocean conditions comes from stable isotope ratios found in sediment records. For example, δ
34S, or the measurement of
34S and
32S concentrations compared to a standard, were found to be around 40‰ during the Boring Billion.
A δ
34S value higher than 45‰ would be evidence of a fully oxygenated ocean, while a δ
34S value lower than 5‰ would imply an anoxic atmosphere.
In the paper, Canfield also used a box model to explain how intermediate oceans, or oceans that are only partially oxidized, would have formed. The model shows that, assuming nutrient levels were anywhere near present-day levels, atmospheric oxygen levels would have needed to be much higher at the end of the GOE in order to fully oxygenate the ocean.
Scientific dispute
There is some dispute about the stability of large-scale euxinia.
Euxinic conditions would result in the depletion of metals essential for life, like
molybdenum and
copper. This would prevent the high rates of primary production that are required for euxinic oceans to form in the first place.
Indeed, evidence from shale records found that molybdenum concentrations in the ocean were less than 1/5th of today's ocean.
See also