Modern surface seawater is demonstrably supersaturated with respect to
CaCO 3 , and the presence of carbonate sediments in rocks of all ages suggests that
it has been throughout much of Earth history. Oceanic pH is unlikely to have
fallen below 6 as such a shift requires a 1000-fold increase in atmospheric pCO 2
over its present value of 10-3.6atm. An atmospheric pCO 2 of this magnitude may
have occurred very early in Earth history, but the existence of 3.8 billion-year-
old CaCO 3 sediments shows that seawater was still close to saturation with calcite.
Achieving calcite saturation at these high pCO 2 values implies that oceanic
Ca^2 +concentrations were at that time 10 times larger than modern values. Sea-
water pH has probably never exceeded 9 in the geological past, because at that
pH sodium carbonate would be a much more common mineral precipitate than
calcite. There is no evidence in ancient marine sediments that sodium carbonate
has ever been a common marine precipitate.
6.4.5 Opaline silica
Opaline silica (opal) is a form of biologically produced silicon dioxide
(SiO 2 .nH 2 O) secreted as skeletal material by pelagic phytoplankton (diatoms) and
one group of pelagic zooplankton (radiolarians) (Fig. 6.12). Opaline silica-rich
sediments cover about one-third of the seabed, mainly in areas where sedimen-
The Oceans 205
1
2
3
4
5
Depth (km)
123456
1
2
3
4
5
Supersaturated
Under-
saturated
Lysocline
CCD
Lysocline
CCD
Ω calcite
Increasing rate of
Rate ofCaCO CaCO 3 dissolution
3
dissolution
Degree of saturation
(Ω) for calcite
Basaltic
seafloor
Sea-
bed
Thick CaCO 3
Foraminifera ooze
skeletons
may survive
Red
clay
Relationship between
seafloor topography
and sediment type
CaCO 3
supply
Coccoliths
(foraminifera(
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +
+
+ +
+
+ +
+
+
+
+ +
}
Fig. 6.11Schematic diagram showing depth relationship between degree of saturation for calcite in seawater
and rate of CaCO 3 dissolution. At 4 km depth, as seawater approaches undersaturation with respect to calcite,
rate of dissolution of sinking calcite skeletons increases. The lysocline marks this increased rate of dissolution.
Below the lysocline only large grains (foraminifera) survive dissolution if buried in the seabed sediment. Below
the calcite compensation depth (CCD; see text) all CaCO 3 dissolves, leaving red clays.