Research project
Resolving the enigmatic Precambrian-Cambrian boundary event
- Start date: 1 October 2020
- End date: 30 September 2024
- Funder: NERC
- Value: £51,767
- Primary investigator: Professor Simon Poulton
- Co-investigators: Dr Fred Bowyer
- External co-investigators: Rachel Wood (University of Edinburgh)
The rise of animals (metazoans) is a seminal event in the history of life. The Cambrian Explosion, starting at ~541 Million years ago (Ma), marks the abrupt appearance of abundant and diverse metazoans in the fossil record24. This revolutionary event follows immediately after the high-amplitude BAsal Cambrian carbon isotope Excursion (the BACE, ~540-~538 Ma), a long-known, but highly enigmatic, negative 13C carbon cycle perturbation. There is no single stratigraphic section that allows an integrated study of 13C, key fossil distributions, and absolute ages at the same site, and thus calibration of this profound evolutionary transition remains fragmented and uncertain25. Many key questions then remain: Is the BACE local or global, diagenetic or primary? What is the mechanistic explanation? And what role did the BACE play in the evolution of metazoans? We will constrain the timing of onset, duration, origin, and implications for the global C cycle of the BACE via a highly integrated, multi-disciplinary programme of novel analyses and modelling using unique, global, unweathered, core data. This will allow us to test the overarching hypothesis that the BACE was a global, synchronous redox and phosphorus drawdown event that was the driver of the Cambrian Explosion. By distinguishing physical, extrinsic drivers we can address a fundamental and motivating question: what caused animals to evolve and radiate when they did? This unique dataset is likely to be transformative as it will resolve the key processes fundamental to the coupled evolution of the Earth System and the rise of complex life.