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Oxidised micrometeorites as evidence for low atmospheric pressure on the early Earth

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Rimmer, PB 
Rugheimer, S 

Abstract

Reconstructing a record of the partial pressure of molecular oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere is key for understanding macroevolutionary and environmental change over geological history. Recently, the oxidation state of iron in micrometeorites has been taken to imply the presence of modern Earth concentrations of oxygen in the upper atmosphere at 2.7 Ga, and therefore a highly chemically stratified atmosphere (Tomkins et al., 2016). We here explore the possibility that the mixing ratio of oxygen in Earth’s upper atmosphere, that probed by micrometeorites, may instead be sensitive to the surface atmospheric pressure. We find that the concentrations of oxygen in the upper atmosphere required for micrometeorite oxidation are achieved for a 0.3 bar atmosphere. In this case, significant water vapour reaches high up in the atmosphere and is photodissociated, leading to the formation of molecular oxygen. The presence of oxidised iron in micrometeorites at 2.7 Ga may therefore be further evidence that the atmospheric pressure at the surface of the early Earth was substantially lower than it is today.

Description

Keywords

0402 Geochemistry, 0403 Geology, 2.1 Biological and endogenous factors

Journal Title

GEOCHEMICAL PERSPECTIVES LETTERS

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2410-339X
2410-3403

Volume Title

9

Publisher

European Association of Geochemistry
Sponsorship
Simons Foundation (599634)
PBR thanks the Simons Foundation and Kavli Foundation for funding, specifically Simons Foundation SCOL awards 599634