The transitional hydrosphere
The nature of the rock record from the time of the first sedimentary rocks (approximately 3.8 billion years ago) to about one to two billion years ago suggests that the amount of oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere was significantly lower than it is today and that there were continuous chemical trends in the sedimentary rocks formed and, more subtly, in the composition of the hydrosphere. The chemistry of rocks shifted dramatically during this transitional period. The source rocks of sediments during this time may have been more basaltic than subsequent ones. Sedimentary debris was formed by the alteration of such source rocks in an oxygen-deficient atmosphere and accumulated primarily under anaerobic (oxygen-free) marine conditions. The chief difference between reactions involving mineral-ocean equilibria at this time and the present day was the role played by ferrous iron (i.e., reduced state of iron). The concentration of dissolved iron in modern oceans is low because of the insolubility of oxidized iron oxides. During the transition stage and earlier, oxygen-deficient environments were prevalent, and these favoured the formation of minerals containing ferrous iron from the alteration of rocks slightly more rich in basalt than those of today. Indeed, iron carbonate siderite and iron silicate greenalite, in close association with chert and iron sulfide pyrite, are characteristic minerals that occur in iron formations of the middle Precambrian (about 2.5 billion to 1.6 billion years ago). The chert originally was deposited as amorphous silica; equilibrium between amorphous silica, siderite, and greenalite at 25 °C (77 °F) and a total pressure of one atmosphere requires a carbon dioxide pressure of about 10−2.5 (0.00316) atmosphere, or 10 times the present-day value.
The oceans of this transitional period can be thought of as a solution that resulted from an acid leach of basaltic rocks, and, because the neutralization of the volatile acid gases was not restricted primarily to land areas as it is today, much of this alteration may have occurred by submarine processes. Anaerobic depositional environments with internal carbon dioxide pressures of about 10−2.5 atmosphere prevailed, and the oxygen-deficient atmosphere itself may have had a carbon dioxide pressure close to 10−2.5 atmosphere. If so, the pH of early ocean water was lower than that of modern seawater and the calcium concentration was higher; moreover, the early ocean water was probably saturated with respect to amorphous silica—roughly 120 parts per million (ppm).
To simulate what might have occurred, it is helpful to imagine emptying the Pacific basin, throwing in great masses of broken basaltic material, filling it with hydrogen chloride dissolved in water so that the acid becomes neutralized, and then carbonating the solution by bubbling carbon dioxide through it. Oxygen would not be permitted into the system. The hydrochloric acid would leach the rocks, resulting in the release and precipitation of silica and the production of a chloride ocean containing sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, aluminum, iron, and reduced sulfur species in the proportions present in the rocks. As complete neutralization was approached, the aluminum could begin to precipitate as hydroxides and then combine with precipitated silica to form cation-deficient aluminosilicates. As the neutralization process reached its end, the aluminosilicates would combine with more silica and with cations to form such minerals as chlorite, and ferrous iron would combine with silica and sulfur to produce greenalite and pyrite. In the final solution, chlorine would be balanced by sodium and calcium in roughly equal proportions, with subordinate amounts of potassium and magnesium; aluminum would be quantitatively removed, and silicon would be at saturation with amorphous silica. If this solution were then carbonated, calcium would be removed as calcium carbonate, and the chlorine balance would be maintained by abstraction of more sodium from the primary rock. The sediments formed in this system would contain chiefly silica, ferrous iron silicates, chloritic minerals, calcium carbonate, calcium-magnesium carbonates, and small amounts of pyrite.
If the hydrogen chloride added were in excess of the carbon dioxide, the resultant oceans would have a high content of calcium chloride (CaCl2), but with a pH still near neutrality. If the carbon dioxide added were in excess of the chlorine, calcium would be precipitated as carbonate until it reached a level roughly that of present-day ocean waters—namely, a few hundred parts per million.
If this newly created ocean were left undisturbed for several hundred million years, its waters would evaporate and be transported onto the continents (in the form of precipitation); streams would transport their loads into it. The sediments produced in this ocean would be uplifted and incorporated into the continents. The influence of the continental debris would gradually be felt and the pH might change somewhat. Iron would be oxidized out of the ferrous silicates to yield iron oxides, but the composition of the water would not vary substantially.
The primary minerals of igneous rocks are all mildly basic compounds. When these minerals react in excess with acids such as hydrogen chloride and carbon dioxide, they produce neutral or mildly alkaline solutions as well as a set of altered aluminosilicate and carbonate reaction products. It is improbable that seawater has changed through time from a solution approximately in equilibrium with these reaction products—i.e., with clay minerals and carbonates.
The modern hydrosphere
It is likely that the hydrosphere achieved its modern chemical characteristics about 1.5 billion to 2 billion years ago. The chemical and mineralogical compositions and the relative proportions of sedimentary rocks of this age differ little from their counterparts of the Paleozoic Era (from 541 million to 252 million years ago). Calcium sulfate deposits dated to the late Precambrian (about 1.6 billion to 541 million years ago) attest to the fact that the acid sulfur gases had been neutralized to sulfate by this time. Chemically precipitated ferric oxides in late Precambrian sedimentary rocks indicate available free oxygen, whatever its percentage. The chemistry and mineralogy of middle and late Precambrian shales are similar to those of Paleozoic shales. The carbon isotopic signature of carbonate rocks has been remarkably constant for more than three billion years, indicating exceptional stability in size and fluxes related to organic carbon. The sulfur isotopic signature of sulfur phases in rocks strongly suggests that the sulfur cycle involving heterotrophic bacterial reduction of sulfate was in operation 2.7 billion years ago. It therefore appears that continuous cycling of sediments similar to those of today has occurred for 1.5 billion to 2 billion years and that these sediments have controlled hydrospheric, and particularly oceanic, composition.
It was once thought that the saltiness of the modern oceans simply represents the storage of salts (that is, compounds that form when part of an acid is replaced by a metal or something like a metal) derived from rock weathering and transported to the oceans by fluvial processes. With increasing knowledge of the age of Earth, however, it was soon realized that, at the present rate of delivery of salts to the ocean or even at much reduced rates, the total salt content and the mass of individual salts in the oceans could be attained in geologically short time intervals compared with the planet’s age. The total mass of salt in the oceans can be accounted for at today’s rates of stream delivery in about 12 million years. The mass of dissolved silica in ocean water can be doubled in just 20,000 years by the addition of stream-derived silica. To double the sodium content would take 70 million years. It then became apparent that the oceans are not merely an accumulator of salts. Rather, as water evaporates from the oceans, together with some salt, the salts introduced must be removed in the form of minerals deposited in marine sediments. Accordingly, the concept of the oceans as a chemical system changed from that of a simple accumulator to that of a steady-state system in which rates of inflow of materials equal rates of outflow. The steady-state concept permits influx to vary with time, but the inflow would be matched by nearly simultaneous and equal variation of efflux.
In such a steady-state conceptual view of the oceans, it has been found necessary to treat components of ocean water in terms of all their influxes and effluxes and to be more cognizant of the time scale of application of the steady-state concept. Indeed, the recent increase in the carbon dioxide concentration of the atmosphere due to the burning of fossil fuels has been linked to a changed pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations of surface ocean water on a time scale measured in hundreds of years. If fossil-fuel burning were to cease, return to the original state of seawater composition could take thousands of years. Ocean water is not in steady state with respect to carbon on these time scales, but on a longer geologic time scale it certainly could be. Even on this longer time scale, however, oceanic composition has varied because of natural changes in the carbon dioxide level of the atmosphere and because of other factors.
It appears that the best description of modern seawater composition is that of a chemical system in a dynamic quasi-steady state. Changes in composition may occur over time, but the system always seems to return to a time-averaged steady-state composition. In other words, since 1.5 billion to 2 billion years ago, evolutionary chemical changes in the hydrosphere have been small when viewed against the magnitude of previous change.
It should be noted that rivers supply dissolved constituents to the oceans, whereas high- and low-temperature reactions between seawater and submarine basalts and reactions in sediment pore waters may add or remove constituents from ocean water. Biological processes involved in the formation of the opaline silica skeletons of diatoms (a type of algae with a shell made of silica) and radiolarians (planktonic protozoans) and the carbonate skeletons of planktonic foraminiferans (shelled unicellular organisms possessing pseudopods) and coccolithophorids (marine planktonic biflagellated organisms that secrete a type of minute calcium carbonate platelet or ring) chiefly remove calcium and silica from seawater. Exchange reactions between river-borne clays entering seawater are particularly significant for sodium and calcium ions. Most of the carbon imbalance in ocean water represents carbon released to the ocean-atmosphere system during precipitation of carbonate minerals; i.e.,
In the case of iron, it has been documented that “dissolved” iron carried by rivers is rapidly precipitated as hydroxides in the mixing zone with seawater and that the reduced dissolved iron released from anaerobic sediments also is rapidly precipitated under the oxic conditions (i.e., those with oxygen present) prevailing in the water column. Iron is also precipitated as iron smectites, hydrated iron oxides, and nontronite (iron-rich montmorillonite) in the deep sea. It is thus likely that iron is removed by these processes.