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Featured researches published by David Taylor Johnston.


Science | 2010

Calibrating the Cryogenian

Francis A. Macdonald; Mark D. Schmitz; James L. Crowley; Charles F. Roots; David S. Jones; Adam C. Maloof; Justin V. Strauss; Phoebe A. Cohen; David Taylor Johnston; Daniel P. Schrag

Aging Snowball Earth Earths glacial cycles have varied dramatically over time; at one point glaciers may have covered nearly the entire planet. Correlating various paleoclimate proxies such as fossil and isotope records from that time hinges on the ability to acquire precise age estimates of rocks deposited around the time of this so-called “Snowball Earth.” Macdonald et al. (p. 1241) report new high-precision U-Pb dates of Neoproterozoic strata in the Yukon and Northwest Territories, Canada, to calibrate the timing of carbon isotope variation in rocks from other locations around the globe. Based on the estimated past positions of where these rocks were deposited, glaciers probably extended to equatorial latitudes. The overlap with the survival and, indeed, diversification of some eukaryotes in the fossil record suggests that life survived in localized ecological niches during this global glaciation. A volcanic tuff dated to 716.5 million years ago calibrates the timing of a global glaciation event and eukaryotic survival. The Neoproterozoic was an era of great environmental and biological change, but a paucity of direct and precise age constraints on strata from this time has prevented the complete integration of these records. We present four high-precision U-Pb ages for Neoproterozoic rocks in northwestern Canada that constrain large perturbations in the carbon cycle, a major diversification and depletion in the microfossil record, and the onset of the Sturtian glaciation. A volcanic tuff interbedded with Sturtian glacial deposits, dated at 716.5 million years ago, is synchronous with the age of the Franklin large igneous province and paleomagnetic poles that pin Laurentia to an equatorial position. Ice was therefore grounded below sea level at very low paleolatitudes, which implies that the Sturtian glaciation was global in extent.


Science | 2010

Explaining the Structure of the Archean Mass-Independent Sulfur Isotope Record

Itay Halevy; David Taylor Johnston; Daniel P. Schrag

Modeling suggests that volcanic output and microorganisms created a distinctive profile of sulfur isotopes on early Earth. Sulfur isotopes in ancient sediments provide a record of past environmental conditions. The long–time-scale variability and apparent asymmetry in the magnitude of minor sulfur isotope fractionation in Archean sediments remain unexplained. Using an integrated biogeochemical model of the Archean sulfur cycle, we find that the preservation of mass-independent sulfur is influenced by a variety of extra-atmospheric mechanisms, including biological activity and continental crust formation. Preservation of atmospherically produced mass-independent sulfur implies limited metabolic sulfur cycling before ~2500 million years ago; the asymmetry in the record indicates that bacterial sulfate reduction was geochemically unimportant at this time. Our results suggest that the large-scale structure of the record reflects variability in the oxidation state of volcanic sulfur volatiles.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2010

Clay mineralogy, organic carbon burial, and redox evolution in Proterozoic oceans

Nicholas J. Tosca; David Taylor Johnston; Alexandra Arcadievna Mushegian; Daniel H. Rothman; Roger E. Summons; Andrew H. Knoll


Precambrian Research | 2010

Geobiology of the Late Paleoproterozoic Duck Creek Formation, Western Australia

Jonathan P. Wilson; Woodward W. Fischer; David Taylor Johnston; Andrew H. Knoll; John P. Grotzinger; Malcolm R. Walter; Neal J. McNaughton; Mel Simon; John Abelson; Daniel P. Schrag; Roger E. Summons; Abigail C. Allwood; Miriam S. Andres; Crystal Gammon; Jessica Garvin; Sky Rashby; Maia Schweizer; Wesley Andres Watters


Elements | 2010

Touring the Biogeochemical Landscape of a Sulfur-Fueled World

David Taylor Johnston


Archive | 2008

Clay Mineralogy and Organic Carbon Burial in Proterozoic Basins

Nicholas J. Tosca; David Taylor Johnston; Arcady R. Mushegian; Daniel H. Rothman; Andrew H. Knoll


Archive | 2008

Early Neoproterozoic Ocean Chemistry: Fe-S Systematics from the Chuar Group

David Taylor Johnston; Simon W. Poulton; Carol M. Dehler; Donald E. Canfield; Andrew H. Knoll


Archive | 2008

Fractionation of multiple sulfur isotopes during phototrophic S oxidation

Aubrey L. Zerkle; James Farquhar; David Taylor Johnston; Ruth Cox; Donald E. Canfield


Archive | 2010

Constraints on the Archean Surface Environment from Mass-Independent Sulfur Isotopes (Invited)

Itay Halevy; David Taylor Johnston; Daniel P. Schrag


Archive | 2010

Recalibrating the concentration of Precambrian seawater sulfate

David Taylor Johnston; Alexander S. Bradley; Adrienne Hoarfrost; Peter R. Girguis

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James Farquhar

University of California

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Roger E. Summons

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Donald E. Canfield

University of Southern Denmark

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Daniel H. Rothman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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