Isotope stratigraphy: Insights on paleoclimate and formation of nitrate deposits in the Atacama Desert, Chile

2018 
Abstract Arid environment nitrate deposits are economically important and analogous to Martian environments, but their formation is poorly understood. Detailed N, O, and C isotope stratigraphy suggests Atacama Desert nitrate deposits form abiologically by differential leaching during hyperaridity (precipitation 15 N (AIR) 5.6 to −2.8‰) and oxygen (δ 18 O (VSMOW) 44.1–51.8‰) isotope values for these sediments suggests this was an abiological process, produced by nitrogen deposition during extreme hyperaridity, and overprinted by subsurface nitrate enrichment through mobilization by slightly higher and variable precipitation events. Carbon isotope values in the topmost and bottommost units (δ 13 C (PBD)  −25.1, −22.2, and −22.9‰) suggest this occurred when soil microbial life was active, though not abundant. The overprint of nitrate enrichment/leaching by precipitation produced carbon isotope values in the middle unit (δ 13 C (PBD)  −2.1‰) consistent with incipient freshwater carbonate. While biological processes are called upon to explain leaching and enrichment in metallic ore deposits, nitrate deposits appear to have secondary enrichment which is predominantly abiological.
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