The oceans act as an interface between the Earth’s atmosphere, the continents and the deep mantle via surface processes, erosion, and hydrothermalism. The aim of the EU-funded GOforISOBIF project is to investigate the composition of early seawater recorded in Precambrian banded iron formations to provide unique insight into the processes that have affected the Earth’s major reservoirs at the beginning of our planet history. Using new and innovative geochemical tools, the project will focus on three first-order questions: 1) the origin, composition and size of the first continents; 2) the detection of whiffs of oxygen in the early oceans before the great oxidation event (GOE); 3) the relationship between hydrothermal activity and global mantle geodynamics.
The proposed project promotes the application of state-of-the-art isotopic measurements, with an emphasis on further methodological development to set-up new isotope proxies. The samples that will be analyzed in this project are amongst the most ancient remnants of sedimentary rocks discovered on Earth so far. They have never been subjected to such a detailed level of isotopic analyses and will open up new perspectives in our understanding of the Precambrian environment and geodynamics.