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Euxinia

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A beautiful winter scene at Mariager Fjord with swans and ducks swimming on the icy water.

Euxinia

Euxinia, or euxinic conditions, describes water that lacks oxygen and contains high levels of hydrogen sulfide. This special kind of water is found in places where the layers of water don't mix well. The top layer has oxygen and supports many living things, but the deeper water has no oxygen and lots of hydrogen sulfide, which is poisonous to most life.

The term "euxinia" comes from the ancient Greek name for the Black Sea, which means "hospitable sea." Long ago, during a time called the Proterozoic eon, many oceans may have been like this. Scientists, such as Donald Canfield, study these ancient oceans to learn more about Earth's history.

Today, euxinia is rare but still exists in some places, like the Black Sea and certain fjords. These areas help scientists understand how ancient oceans may have worked and what life was like in those conditions.

Background

Euxinia is a condition where water has no oxygen and contains hydrogen sulfide. It mostly happened in Earth's ancient oceans. Scientists are still learning how often it occurred. Before the Great Oxygenation Event about 2.3 billion years ago, there was very little oxygen in the air or the ocean. A scientist named Canfield suggested that instead of the deep ocean getting oxygen, it actually got filled with hydrogen sulfide. This idea is called the Canfield ocean.

Today, euxinia is rare and mostly found in special kinds of lakes and places like the Black Sea. Less than half a percent of the ocean floor today has these conditions.

Causes

Diagram of mechanisms of euxinia in the Canfield Ocean

Euxinic conditions happen when water has no oxygen and contains hydrogen sulfide. This needs special conditions like no oxygen, sulfate ions, organic matter, and special bacteria that turn sulfate into hydrogen sulfide. In most oceans today, there is too much oxygen because of photosynthesis and gas exchange with the air. But in some deep places, sulfate reduction can still happen.

For euxinia to last, the water must have no oxygen, lots of nutrients, and stay layered. This can happen in some ocean basins or during warm climates. When it gets warmer, water holds less oxygen, and more nutrients come from rivers, helping create conditions for hydrogen sulfide to form.

Evidence for euxinic events

Black shale is one of the preliminary indicators of anoxia and perhaps euxinia

Black shales are dark rocks that contain lots of organic material. They often show that there was no oxygen in the water below. This lack of oxygen helps keep the organic material safe.

Scientists study special chemicals in ancient rocks to learn about past conditions. For example, they look at sulfur and molybdenum to find signs of water that had no oxygen and lots of hydrogen sulfide.

They also study tiny remains of special bacteria that live where there is light but no oxygen. These remains can tell scientists about past water conditions. Another clue comes from pyrite, a mineral that forms when hydrogen sulfide meets iron. Finding lots of this mineral can suggest past conditions with no oxygen and lots of hydrogen sulfide.

Euxinic events in Earth's history

Presence of euxinia in the world's ancient deep oceans. According to Canfield, the deep ocean became sulfitic around 1.8 billion years ago and stayed that way for much of the boring billion. Periodic euxinia dominated through the Late Devonian Kelwasser events, and then most likely disappeared during the Carboniferous. Euxinia reemerged at the Permian-Triassic Boundary, and may have been present during the Ocean Anoxia Events of the Mesozoic. Euxinia is rare in Cenozoic oceans. Adapted from Lyons, 2008

The Proterozoic era saw a change from oceans without oxygen to ones with oxygen. Some scientists think that a lack of oxygen lasted longer, and that sulfide, not oxygen, ended the banded iron formations. Evidence from Canada and Australia suggests there were times when the water had no oxygen and lots of hydrogen sulfide. This may have continued until about 0.8 billion years ago.

During the Phanerozoic eon, there were probably many times when oceans had euxinia, especially during big events that caused many plants and animals to die, like the Late Devonian and Permian–Triassic. In the Paleozoic, signs of euxinia have been found in China and Canada. In the Mesozoic, some events with less oxygen in the ocean included euxinia, but it wasn’t everywhere. The Cenozoic has few signs of euxinia in the record.

Modern euxinia

Euxinic conditions happen when water has no oxygen and contains hydrogen sulfide, a gas that smells like rotten eggs. Today, these conditions are rare in the open ocean but still exist in some small places. These areas often have layers of water that don’t mix well, which helps keep the oxygen-poor, sulfur-rich water at the bottom.

One well-known example is the Black Sea, which helps scientists understand ancient ocean conditions. It has layers of water, with oxygen at the top and sulfur at the bottom, separated by a sharp boundary called the chemocline. Other places, like some fjords and lakes, can also have euxinic conditions, especially when their layers don’t mix well.

Images

Diagram showing different types of ancient bacteria and their color pigments that help scientists study old ocean environments.
Diagram showing the water flow in a fjord estuary

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Euxinia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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