Selenium Isotope Paleobiogeochemistry
The attraction of selenium isotopes as a paleoenvironmental tracer lies in the high redox potential of selenium oxyanions (SeIV and SeVI), the dominant species in the modern ocean. The largest isotopic fractionations occur during oxyanion reduction, which makes selenium isotopes a sensitive proxy for the redox evolution of our planet. As a case study we review existing data from the Neoarchean and Paleoproterozoic, which show that significant isotopic fractionations are absent until 2.5 Ga, and prolonged isotopic deviations only appear around 2.3 Ga. Selenium isotopes have thus begun to reveal complex spatiotemporal redox patterns not reflected in other proxies.
Product details
February 2025Paperback
9781108749169
30 pages
150 × 230 × 2 mm
0.6kg
Not yet published - available from February 2025
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Materials and Analytical Methods
- 3. Proxy Mechanics
- 4. Case Study
- 5. Future Prospects.