We make the case that marine processes are an important component of the canonical silicate weathering feedback, and have played a much more important role in p CO2 regulation than traditionally imagined. Notably, geochemical evidence indicate that the weathering of marine sediments and off‐axis basalt alteration act as major carbon sinks. However, this sink was potentially dampened during Earth’s early history when oceans had higher levels of dissolved silicon (Si), iron (Fe), and magnesium (Mg), and instead likely fostered more extensive carbon recycling within the ocean‐atmosphere system via reverse weathering—that in turn acted to elevate ocean‐atmosphere CO2 levels.
To investigate the weathering of sedimentary organic matter and its role in regulating atmospheric oxygen, a theoretical modeling study is presented that addresses the fundamental controls on atmospheric oxygen uptake: erosion rate, organic matter content, and reaction rate. We compare model results with the previous part of this study that analyzed a drill core of black shale from the New Albany formation (Upper Devonian, Clay City, KY) for total and organic carbon, pyrite sulfur, porosity, permeability and specific surface area. As was observed in the field study, the model predicts that the loss of organic matter by oxidative weathering takes place across a reaction “front” where organic carbon content decreases sharply toward the land surface along with pyrite loss.