早期地球
氮气循环
氮气
环境科学
硝酸盐
氮同位素
固氮
生物地球化学循环
生物圈
环境化学
生态系统
地球科学
大气科学
地质学
化学
生态学
地球化学
生物
有机化学
作者
Patrick Barth,Eva E. Stüeken,Ch. Helling,Lukas Rossmanith,Yuqian Peng,Wendell W. Walters,Mark W. Claire
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41561-023-01187-2
摘要
Bioavailable nitrogen is thought to be a requirement for the origin and sustenance of life. Before the onset of biological nitrogen fixation, abiotic pathways to fix atmospheric N2 must have been prominent to provide bioavailable nitrogen to Earth's earliest ecosystems. Lightning has been shown to produce fixed nitrogen as nitrite and nitrate in both modern atmospheres dominated by N2 and O2 and atmospheres dominated by N2 and CO2 analogous to the Archaean Earth. However, a better understanding of the isotopic fingerprints of lightning-generated fixed nitrogen is needed to assess the role of this process on the early Earth. Here, we present results from spark discharge experiments in N2-CO2 and N2-O2 gas mixtures. Our experiments suggest that lightning-driven nitrogen fixation may have been similarly efficient in the Archaean atmosphere, compared to modern times. Measurements of the isotopic ratio {\delta}15N of the discharge-produced nitrite and nitrate in solution show very low values of -6 to -15 permil after equilibration with the gas phase with a calculated endmember composition of -17 permil. These results are much lower than most {\delta}15N values documented from the sedimentary rock record, which supports the development of biological nitrogen fixation earlier than 3.2 Ga. However, some Paleoarchean records (3.7 Ga) may be consistent with lightning-derived nitrogen input, highlighting the potential role of this process for the earliest ecosystems.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI