3:45 PM - 4:00 PM
[MIS17-08] Interactions of atmosphere and marine biosphere after the emergence of oxygenic photosynthesis in the early Earth
Keywords:Atmospheric Photochemistry, Early Earth
Here we employed a novel coupled model of atmosphere photochemistry and marine biogeochemical cycles with the marine microbial ecosystem to demonstrate the chemical evolutions of ocean, atmosphere, and marine microbial ecosystem before the GOE. We found that the primary productivity of anaerobic marine microbial ecosystem diminishes when the primary productivity of oxygenic photosynthesis becomes so large that the supply rate of oxygen from the ocean exceeds that of methane, which leads to the decrease in the atmospheric methane level and the supply rate of electron donors to the ocean (H2 and CO). This novel feedback is explained by the supply of OH-radicals from the biogenic oxygen, which becomes the primary sink of biogenic methane and electron donors (H2 and CO). The surface cooling due to weakening of atmospheric methane cycle may have facilitated the supply of nutrients from the continent by increasing the atmospheric CO2 level and the contribution of continental weathering relative to seafloor weathering (Watanabe and Tajika, 2021), enhancing the variability of the primary productivity of oxygenic photosynthesis. These results enlighten the intimate links between the atmospheric oxygenation, climate cooling, and transformations in the Earth-like marine biosphere. The behaviors of the coupled system may represent a fundamental aspect during the oxygenation of the planetary surface with the existence of marine biosphere, which would contribute to interpreting the sign of life on life-bearing Earth-like planets for the future direct-imaging missions.