Earth’s earliest global glaciation? Carbonate geochemistry and geochronology of the Polisarka Sedimentary Formation, Kola Peninsula, Russia

A.T. Brasier, A.P. Martin, V.A. Melezhik, A.R. Prave, D.J. Condon, A.E. Fallick

    Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    As part of the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program's Fennoscandian Arctic Russia-Drilling Early Earth Project (ICDP FAR-DEEP), Palaeoproterozoic diamictic and associated rocks were targeted and recovered in Hole 3A on the Kola Peninsula of NW Russia. In addition to the diamictites, carbonate sedimentary rocks and volcanic ash layers (all metamorphosed to greenschist grade) were encountered. Sedimentology and geochemistry suggest deposition of the diamictites in an open-marine aragonite-precipitating environment. Sampling of the core and of outcrops from the same geographical area yielded a number of zircons for analyses, the majority of which were inherited. However a tuff at 20.01m core depth yielded zircons dated at 2434±1.2Ma (±6.6Myr including decay constant uncertainties) that we interpret as a magmatic age. These data, combined with dates from underlying intrusions, indicate deposition of the Polisarka Sedimentary Formation diamictites and underlying carbonates during an interval of time from ca. 2430 to 2440Ma. The carbonate rocks, which likely originally included aragonitic limestones, were deposited mostly in a deep-water setting (i.e. at least below storm wave base) and occur below the diamictite. They record two inorganic carbon δ
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)278-294
    JournalPrecambrian Research
    Issue number235
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2013

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