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Featured researches published by Huan Cui.


Geobiology | 2016

Environmental context for the terminal Ediacaran biomineralization of animals.

Huan Cui; Alan J. Kaufman; Shuhai Xiao; Sara Peek; H. Cao; X. Min; Yaoping Cai; Z. Siegel; Xiao-Ming Liu; Yongbo Peng; James D. Schiffbauer; A. J. Martin

In terminal Ediacaran strata of South China, the onset of calcareous biomineralization is preserved in the paleontological transition from Conotubus to Cloudina in repetitious limestone facies of the Dengying Formation. Both fossils have similar size, funnel-in-funnel construction, and epibenthic lifestyle, but Cloudina is biomineralized, whereas Conotubus is not. To provide environmental context for this evolutionary milestone, we conducted a high-resolution elemental and stable isotope study of the richly fossiliferous Gaojiashan Member. Coincident with the first appearance of Cloudina is a significant positive carbonate carbon isotope excursion (up to +6‰) and an increase in the abundance and (34) S composition of pyrite. In contrast, δ(34) S values of carbonate-associated sulfate remain steady throughout the succession, resulting in anomalously large (>70‰) sulfur isotope fractionations in the lower half of the member. The fractionation trend likely relates to changes in microbial communities, with sulfur disproportionation involved in the lower interval, whereas microbial sulfate reduction was the principal metabolic pathway in the upper. We speculate that the coupled paleontological and biogeochemical anomalies may have coincided with an increase in terrestrial weathering fluxes of sulfate, alkalinity, and nutrients to the depositional basin, which stimulated primary productivity, the spread of an oxygen minimum zone, and the development of euxinic conditions in subtidal and basinal environments. Enhanced production and burial of organic matter is thus directly connected to the carbon isotope anomaly, and likely promoted pyritization as the main taphonomic pathway for Conotubus and other soft-bodied Ediacara biotas. Our studies suggest that the Ediacaran confluence of ecological pressures from predation and environmental pressures from an increase in seawater alkalinity set the stage for an unprecedented geobiological response: the evolutionary novelty of animal biomineralization.


Science Advances | 2018

Extensive marine anoxia during the terminal ediacaran period

Feifei Zhang; Shuhai Xiao; Brian Kendall; Stephen J. Romaniello; Huan Cui; Michael Meyer; Geoffrey J. Gilleaudeau; Alan J. Kaufman; Ariel D. Anbar

Extensive marine anoxia in the terminal Ediacaran ocean was associated with the decline of the Ediacara biota. The terminal Ediacaran Period witnessed the decline of the Ediacara biota (which may have included many stem-group animals). To test whether oceanic anoxia might have played a role in this evolutionary event, we measured U isotope compositions (δ238U) in sedimentary carbonates from the Dengying Formation of South China to obtain new constraints on the extent of global redox change during the terminal Ediacaran. We found the most negative carbonate δ238U values yet reported (−0.95 per mil), which were reproduced in two widely spaced coeval sections spanning the terminal Ediacaran Period (551 to 541 million years ago). Mass balance modeling indicates an episode of extensive oceanic anoxia, during which anoxia covered >21% of the seafloor and most U entering the oceans was removed into sediments below anoxic waters. The results suggest that an expansion of oceanic anoxia and temporal-spatial redox heterogeneity, independent of other environmental and ecological factors, may have contributed to the decline of the Ediacara biota and may have also stimulated animal motility.


Episodes | 2016

Towards an Ediacaran Time Scale: Problems, Protocols, and Prospects

Shuhai Xiao; Guy M. Narbonne; Chuanming Zhou; Marc Laflamme; Dmitriy V. Grazhdankin; Malgorzata Moczydlowska-Vidal; Huan Cui


Chemical Geology | 2015

Redox architecture of an Ediacaran ocean margin: Integrated chemostratigraphic (δ13C–δ34S–87Sr/86Sr–Ce/Ce*) correlation of the Doushantuo Formation, South China

Huan Cui; Alan J. Kaufman; Shuhai Xiao; Maoyan Zhu; Chuanming Zhou; Xiao Ming Liu


Geochemical Perspectives Letters | 2016

Tracing Earth’s O2 evolution using Zn/Fe ratios in marine carbonates

Xiao-Ming Liu; Linda C. Kah; Andrew H. Knoll; Huan Cui; Alan J. Kaufman; Anat Shahar; Robert M. Hazen


Chemical Geology | 2017

Was the Ediacaran Shuram Excursion a globally synchronized early diagenetic event? Insights from methane-derived authigenic carbonates in the uppermost Doushantuo Formation, South China

Huan Cui; Alan J. Kaufman; Shuhai Xiao; Chuanming Zhou; Xiao-Ming Liu


Precambrian Research | 2013

Stratigraphy, palaeontology and geochemistry of the late Neoproterozoic Aar Member, southwest Namibia: Reflecting environmental controls on Ediacara fossil preservation during the terminal Proterozoic in African Gondwana

Michael Hall; Alan J. Kaufman; Patricia Vickers-Rich; Andrey Yu. Ivantsov; Peter Trusler; Ulf Linnemann; Mandy Hofmann; David A. Elliott; Huan Cui; Mikhail A. Fedonkin; Karl-Heinz Hoffmann; Siobhan A. Wilson; Gabi Schneider; Jeff Smith


Sedimentary Geology | 2016

Phosphogenesis associated with the Shuram Excursion: Petrographic and geochemical observations from the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation of South China

Huan Cui; Shuhai Xiao; Chuanming Zhou; Yongbo Peng; Alan J. Kaufman; Rebecca E. Plummer


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2016

Redox-dependent distribution of early macro-organisms: Evidence from the terminal Ediacaran Khatyspyt Formation in Arctic Siberia

Huan Cui; Dmitriy V. Grazhdankin; Shuhai Xiao; Sara Peek; Vladimir I. Rogov; Natalia Bykova; Natalie E. Sievers; Xiao-Ming Liu; Alan J. Kaufman


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2016

Methane-derived authigenic carbonate from the lower Doushantuo Formation of South China: Implications for seawater sulfate concentration and global carbon cycle in the early Ediacaran ocean

Chuanming Zhou; Chengguo Guan; Huan Cui; Qing Ouyang; Wei Wang

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Xiao-Ming Liu

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Chuanming Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yongbo Peng

Louisiana State University

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Maoyan Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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