A new study by University of Alberta scientists shows that banded iron formations originated from oxidized iron, confirming the relevance and accuracy of existing models--a finding of great importance to the geological community.
image: https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIBOGhDFQU25aMT4i_-yHLEjq7ufCp1DmhzsMwrnFFShDDM3bdsp6s_2L5tp4Qz1DecWyO3vEhAL20Xn7NuobBY8ZjvFf0d4m8pPVhZ87AbuGrfDBo9d56YRvEW-JaGOtV0jcSBg/s640/banded-iron.jpg
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Banded iron formations, such as this one pictured in Western Australia, precipitated out of the Earth's early oceans billions of years ago, and are providing new clues to the evolution of ancient seawater and the microbes that inhabited it [Credit: Tom Price] |
In the last decade, a new model was proposed, suggesting that the formations began as ferrous iron that was later oxidized by oxygen in the environment--a model that, if correct, would require a major paradigm shift in this area of study.
To examine this possibility, a group of researchers led by Konhauser's PhD student Leslie Robbins tested the theory using a hydrogeological model, designed to determine how long it would take oxygen to oxidize such a formation. The research team included Professor Ben Roston, Assistant Professor Daniel Alessi, and Professor Larry Heaman.
"Essentially, we found that this would be possible in only one per cent of cases in the suggested time frame of 250 million years," said Konhauser. "Moreover, we had to create unrealistic conditions in order to make the new proposed model work--for instance, an extremely steep slope, or rock that was actually sand, or a great deal of oxygen."
These results confirmed that the newly proposed model is inaccurate, indicating that existing models and our current understanding remains the most effective method of studying banded iron formations.
"This is a powerful result that stems from the simple question about whether recently proposed models for banded iron formations are plausible when extrapolated to the size of a depositional basin," said Robbins, now a postdoctoral fellow at Yale University in New Haven, United States. "This result has fundamental implications for the formation of these deposits, and this work benefited greatly from strong collaborations both within Earth and Atmospheric Sciences and with our external collaborators."
The paper was published in Nature Geoscience.
Author: Katie Willis | Source: University of Alberta [June 06, 2019]
Read more at https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2019/06/study-confirms-banded-iron-formations.html#oqZQtVL1EIjYXBSb.99
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