Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- The Proterozoic Biosphere
- PART I
- 1 Geology and Paleobiology of the Archean Earth
- 2 Geological Evolution of the Proterozoic Earth
- 3 Proterozoic Biogeochemistry
- 4 Proterozoic Atmosphere and Ocean
- 5 Proterozoic and Selected Early Cambrian Microfossils: Prokaryotes and Protists
- 6 Modern Mat-Building Microbial Communities: a Key to the Interpretation of Proterozoic Stromatolitic Communities
- 7 Proterozoic and Earliest Cambrian Carbonaceous Remains, Trace and Body Fossils
- 8 The Proterozoic-Early Cambrian Evolution of Metaphytes and Metazoans
- 9 Molecular Phylogenetics, Molecular Paleontology, and the Proterozoic Fossil Record
- 10 Biostratigraphy and Paleobiogeography of the Proterozoic
- 11 Biotic Diversity and Rates of Evolution During Proterozoic and Earliest Phanerozoic Time
- 12 A Paleogeographic Model for Vendian and Cambrian Time
- 13 Evolution of the Proterozoic Biosphere: Benchmarks, Tempo, and Mode
- PART 2
- References Cited
- Subject Index
- Index to Geologic Units
- Taxonomic Index
3 - Proterozoic Biogeochemistry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- The Proterozoic Biosphere
- PART I
- 1 Geology and Paleobiology of the Archean Earth
- 2 Geological Evolution of the Proterozoic Earth
- 3 Proterozoic Biogeochemistry
- 4 Proterozoic Atmosphere and Ocean
- 5 Proterozoic and Selected Early Cambrian Microfossils: Prokaryotes and Protists
- 6 Modern Mat-Building Microbial Communities: a Key to the Interpretation of Proterozoic Stromatolitic Communities
- 7 Proterozoic and Earliest Cambrian Carbonaceous Remains, Trace and Body Fossils
- 8 The Proterozoic-Early Cambrian Evolution of Metaphytes and Metazoans
- 9 Molecular Phylogenetics, Molecular Paleontology, and the Proterozoic Fossil Record
- 10 Biostratigraphy and Paleobiogeography of the Proterozoic
- 11 Biotic Diversity and Rates of Evolution During Proterozoic and Earliest Phanerozoic Time
- 12 A Paleogeographic Model for Vendian and Cambrian Time
- 13 Evolution of the Proterozoic Biosphere: Benchmarks, Tempo, and Mode
- PART 2
- References Cited
- Subject Index
- Index to Geologic Units
- Taxonomic Index
Summary
Biogeochemistry encompasses the study of chemical fossils. It includes and draws on knowledge of the biochemical activities of contemporary organisms in modern sedimentary environments, including their roles in the biogeochemical cycling and isotopic fractionation of important elements such as carbon, oxygen, sulfur, and nitrogen, and their production of taxonomically distinctive organic compounds. This Section deals with the chemical entities preserved in the Proterozoic sedimentary record that may carry information about the biology and evolution of early life.
Chemical fossils can be discerned at the atomic level, in the occurrence of anomalous concentrations of a particular element or an isotope; at a molecular level, in the structure and stereochemistry of hydrocarbons derived from membrane lipids or pigments; and at a macromolecular level by way of the preservation of detailed chemical structures in kerogen and morphologically distinct microfossils. Paleobiochemical information is encoded in the nucleic acids of extant organisms and in their comparative biochemistry; this topic is treated in Chapter 9. Here we examine and discuss the occurrence of isotopic and molecular fossils. A considerable and consistent body of information derived, in part, from techniques developed during exploration for petroleum and minerals is now available. Rapid expansion of this knowledge is presently taking place, particularly with regard to chemical processes in early preservation of organic matter, structures of kerogen, isotopic composition of individual biomarkers, and global secular variations in organic and inorganic isotopic abundances.
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- Information
- The Proterozoic BiosphereA Multidisciplinary Study, pp. 81 - 134Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992
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