SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Similar documents
Supporting Information

Silicified glendonites in the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation and their potential paleoclimatic implications

Precambrian Research

Heterogenous oceanic redox conditions through the Ediacaran-Cambrian boundary limited the metazoan zonation

Sediment and sedimentary rocks Sediment

From Rodinia to Pangea: Geodynamics, Life and Climate

GSA DATA REPOSITORY Ye et al.

The Doushantuo Formation was deposited on the South China Craton, a microcontinent

Fleshing out the Ediacaran Period

The Lantian biota: A new window onto the origin and early evolution of multicellular organisms

correlations of the upper Ediacaran in South China

Sedimentary Rocks. Origin, Properties and Identification. Geology Laboratory GEOL 101 Lab Ray Rector - Instructor

Sedimentary Rocks. Origin, Properties and Identification. Physical Geology GEOL 100. Ray Rector - Instructor

GEOLOGY MEDIA SUITE Chapter 8

GSA Data Repository Item

International Conference on Ediacaran and Cambrian Sciences

Paleo Lab #4 - Sedimentary Environments

The Nature of Sedimentary Rocks

EPS 50 Lab 4: Sedimentary Rocks

Sedimentary Rocks. Origin, Properties and Identification. Physical Geology GEOL 101 Lab Ray Rector - Instructor

Correction notice Pervasive oxygenation along late Archaean ocean margins

Ordovician. System. Cambrian. System

Lab 7: Sedimentary Structures

Carbon isotope variability across the Ediacaran Yangtze platform in South China: Implications for a large surface-to-deep ocean δ 13 C gradient

ES120 Sedimentology/Stratigraphy

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Anthill Resources Yukon - An Update on the Einarson Project

Structural Geology of the Mountains

Cretaceous, Dakota Formation, Terra Cotta Member South Side of I-70, Salina County, Kansas

The Neoproterozoic Quruqtagh Group in eastern Chinese Tianshan: evidence for a post-marinoan glaciation

Stratigraphy and Geologic Time. How old are the rocks?

Lecture 10 Constructing the geological timescale

Rockall Plateau. OCN 201: Shelf Sediments

SEDIMENTATION AND STRATIGRAPHY

Clastic Sedimentary Rocks

Data Repository item

GEOLOGIC DATING LAB Principles and Applications

UNIT 4 SEDIMENTARY ROCKS

geologic age of Earth - about 4.6 billion years

Lecture Outline Wednesday - Friday February 14-16, 2018

PLATE TECTONICS THEORY

Geology of Neoproterozoic to Cambrian Adelaide Geosyncline and Cambrian Delamerian Orogen

Accuracy of dating methods utilised

GEOL And a Quick Review of Sedimentary Rocks and Processes

Field trip to Racine Reef Complex, Thornton Quarry, Illinois

Geologic Time: Hutton s Outcrop at Siccar Point. How do we determine age (relative & absolute) What is the age of the earth? How do we know?

The Proterozoic Eon (2500 ma to 540 ma)

Stratigraphy. The part of geology that deals with the formation, composition, sequence, and correlation of rocks, especially stratified rocks

North Greenland collection of oblique aerial photographs - (Twin Otter photos)

Chapter 6 Pages of Earth s Past: Sedimentary Rocks

The Proterozoic: Ga. Archean-early Proterozoic Continents:

8(b). Disruption of mats by seismic events

Sediment and Sedimentary rock

The boundary between two formations (or any distinct layers) is called a contact. Sedimentary rocks cover 75% of continents.

Module 9 Sedimentary Rocks

Geology Laboratory - GEOL 101. Ray Rector - Instructor

NAME HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT #3 MATERIAL COVERS CHAPTERS 8, 9, 10, 11

Stratigraphy and structure of the Ganson Hill area: northern Taconic Allochthon

Evaluating Reflux Dolomitization using a Novel High-Resolution Record of Dolomite

Controls on facies distributions in the Charlie Lake Formation, Peace River Arch, Alberta

The Niagara Escarpment extends from western New York, through the GTA all the way up to Manitoulin Island and into Michigan and Wisconsin.

Before the 1700 s, scientists thought that the Earth was only 6,000 years old. This mindset was based on biblical references.

Sedimentary Environments Chapter 8

As compaction and cementation of these sediments eventually occur, which area will become siltstone? A) A B) B C) C D) D


Different Coloration of Devonian Shales

Habitable Environments of Ancient Mars: Deciphering the Rock Record. John Grotzinger

Middle Cambrian Chemostratigraphy and Biostratigraphy in the Southern Georgina Basin: Correlating the Arthur Creek Hot Shale *

Geologic History Unit Notes. Relative age - general age statement like older, younger more recent

History of Earth. Chapter 9: HISTORY OF EARTH. The Solar System. Early Earth: A Giant Impact! Early Earth. Formation of the Solar System

Chapter 8 Lecture. Earth: An Introduction to Physical Geology. Twelfth Edition. Metamorphism. Rocks. Tarbuck and Lutgens Pearson Education, Inc.

Age Dating and the Oceans

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology

Sedimentary Rocks. Weathering. Mechanical & Chemical Weathering. Sediments. Lithification. Deposition. Transport. Erosion.

Understanding Earth Fifth Edition

Image: G. Parker. Presenters: Henry Chan, Kayla Ireland, Mara Morgenstern, Jessica Palmer, Megan Scott

Name:Maoyan Zhu Organization:Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeonotology, Nanjing, China

THE GEOLOGY OF SCULPTING STONE INDIANA LIMESTONE

Untangling Earth System Responses Recorded in Sulfate's Sulfur and Oxygen Isotopes at the Dawn of Multicellular Life and Today

Sedimentary Geology. Strat and Sed, Ch. 1 1

Sedimentology and Stratigraphy of Lower Smackover Tight Oil Carbonates: Key to Predictive Understanding of Reservoir Quality and Distribution

Sediment. Weathering: mechanical and chemical decomposition and disintegration of rock and minerals at the surface

Persistent effects of the Yellow River on the Chinese marginal seas began at least. ~880 ka ago

GEOLOGY MEDIA SUITE Chapter 5

Chapter 6 Sedimentary and Metamorphic Rock

Structural Features and Fracture Orientation similarities between outcrops of the Ridgeley Sandstone

Comparative Taphonomy of the Vendian Genera. Beltanelloides and Nemiana as a Key to their True. Nature

The Problem of the Welden, Sycamore and Lower Caney in the Eastern Arbuckle Mountains

The Eocene Gir Formation of the Ghani and Ed Dib Fields, Eastern Libya - an example of "Virtual Core Study"

Chapter 5. The Sedimentary Archives

COURSE OUTLINE SEDIMENTARY STRATIGRAPHY 3 CREDITS

How to Log Core (With Examples from the Williston Basin of Southeast Saskatchewan)

Lin Chen Robert A Creaser Daniel J Kontak Oct 29th, 2014

Lower Skinner Valley Fill Sandstones: Attractive Exploration Targets on the Northeast Oklahoma Platform*

GCE A level 1214/01 GEOLOGY GL4 Interpreting the Geological Record

Aptian/Albian Reservoir Development in the Jeanne d Arc Basin, Offshore Eastern Canada

Laboratory 7 Geologic Time

ROCK CLASSIFICATION AND IDENTIFICATION

Journal of Asian Earth Sciences

Transcription:

doi:10.1038/nature09810 1. Depositional Environment The fossiliferous Lantian Member II is interpreted to have deposited in open marine slope-basinal facies. This interpretation is supported by several lines of evidence. First, regional mapping shows that the Yangtze Block is a ESE facing passive continental margin during the early Ediacaran Period, with sandstone-dominated facies to the west giving way to shale-dominated facies to the east 1 (Fig. 1). These two facies are separated by a transitional siltstone facies and carbonate shoals. The Lantian locality sits in the shale facies (Fig. 1) that is widely and continuously distributed on the Yangtze Block 1. This facies continuity suggests that the Lantian black shales were not deposited in an isolated lake 2 or restricted lagoon 3. Second, the lack of wave- or current-influenced sedimentary structures suggests that Lantian Member II black shales were deposited below the wave base. The shales are finely laminated (Supplementary Fig. 1a) and show no evidence of grading (Supplementary Fig. 1b), suggesting that they were deposits from suspension settling rather than distal turbidites. Further, transportation of soft-bodied macrofossils within turbidity current would result in fossil preservation within beds rather than between beds (or on bedding surface), because the fossils would be entrained within turbidity currents. However, the Lantian fossils are mostly preserved on the bedding surface, inconsistent with transportation by turbidity current. Additionally, transportation within turbidity current would typically result in folding and deformation of soft-bodied fossils, which are not common among the Lantian fossils. Third, the lower Lantian Formation contains no sandstone or carbonate interbeds that would indicate shallow-water facies. It is dominated by organic- and pyrite-rich black shales that typically weather to buff colors (Supplementary Fig. 1a) because of the oxidation of pyrite. The in-situ preservation of epibenthic macroalgae in the Lantian Formation suggests deposition within the photic zone. Thus, the lower Lantian Formation was not deposited in abyssal environment like the Conception Group in Newfoundland. Still, the weight of sedimentary and regional geological evidence suggests that it was deposited in a quiet marine environment below the wave base. This is consistent with the random orientation of exceptionally preserved and minimally fragmented macrofossils in the lower Lantian Formation (Supplementary Fig. 2). The random orientation of benthic marcoalgae also indicates that deposition of the lower Lantian Formation was not influenced by deep-water WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 1

processes such as turbidity current or contour current, which would have resulted in unimodal or bimodal orientation of tethered macrofossils, as is the case in the Mistaken Point fossils in Newfoundland 4,5. Supplementary Figure 1. (a) Field photograph of weathered black shales at excavation site near Lantian in southern Anhui Province. Rock hammer (30 cm long) for scale. (b) Plane light photomicrograph of fossiliferous black shale in lower Lantian Formation. Note the lack of graded beds. Dark layers are organic- and pyrite-rich. Stratigraphic up direction on top. Supplementary Figure 2. Slab showing multiple specimens with random orientations. Note that the two specimens in upper part of the photograph are oriented in opposite directions. Scale bar 10 mm. 2. Stratigraphic Correlation and Age Constraints We estimate that the fossiliferous lower Lantian Formation is of early Ediacaran age, somewhere between 635 Ma and 576 Ma. Our estimate is based on a robust correlation with the Doushantuo Formation in the Yangtze Gorges area, which is constrained by several WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 2

radiometric ages. The correlation between the lower Lantian Formation and the lower Doushantuo Formation is supported by regional mapping, lithostratigraphy, and chemostratigraphy. The lithostratigraphic sequence of the Lantian Formation (in southern Anhui) and Doushantuo Formation (in the Yangtze Gorges area) is similar, including three depositional sequences. The first sequence consists of a cap dolostone (Member I) followed by a shale-rich member (Member II). The second depositional sequence is a carbonate rich member (approximately equivalent to Member III: a dolostone unit overlain by a ribbon rock unit, Supplementary Fig. 3). The third depositional sequence is represented by another black shale unit (Member IV) and the lower part of the Dengying Formation. As discussed above, black shales of early Ediacaran age (Member II) can be traced throughout much of the Yangtze Block. In the Yangtze Gorges area, which was situated in the inner platform in early Ediacaran Period, the lower Doushantuo Formation contains some argillaceous dolostone beds, but black shale represents the dominant facies. The lithostratigraphic correlation between the lower Lantian Formation and lower Doushantuo Formation is further supported by δ 13 C chemostratigraphic data. Despite the abundance of shale, the Lantian Formation does contain two carbonate units. The basal Lantian cap dolostone has sedimentary features (e.g., sheet cracks) and δ 13 C values (around 5 ) 6,7 similar to the 635 Ma basal Doushantuo cap dolostone (with the negative δ 13 C excursion EN1) 8,9. The upper Lantian carbonate (Member III) is characterized with a strongly negative δ 13 C excursion 7 that is remarkably similar to the negative δ 13 C excursion EN3 in the upper Doushantuo Formation (Member III) of the Yangtze Gorges area 8 ; importantly, both excursions occur in similar facies (thick-bedded dolostone overlain by ribbon rock; Supplementary Fig. 3). In the Yangtze Gorges area, a zircon U-Pb TIMS age of 635.2±0.6 Ma is reported from within the cap dolostone (Member I) 10, a zircon U-Pb TIMS age of 632.5±0.5 Ma from the lower Member II black shale 10, a Re-Os age of 593±17 Ma from the lower Member IV black shale 11, and a zircon U-Pb TIMS age of 551.1±0.7 Ma from the uppermost Member IV 10. In addition, Kendall et al. reported a Re-Os age of 598±16 Ma from Doushantuo Member IV black shale in the Yangtze Gorges area 12, which is consistent with the 593±17 Ma Re-Os age 11, although Kendall et al. cautioned the interpretation of the Re-Os ages because of possible heterogeneity of the black shale samples 12. Considering their analytical uncertainty, these radiometric dates constrain the minimum age range of Member IV between 576 Ma and 550.4 Ma. Thus, the maximum age range of Member II is between 635.8 Ma and 576 Ma. In WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 3

other words, Doushantuo Member II (and by extension the fossiliferous Lantian Member II) is likely than 576 Ma. Additionally, Liu et al. 13 reported a zircon U-Pb SHRIMP age of 614±7.6 Ma from an ash bed in the Doushantuo Formation at the Zhangcunping section (Supplementary Fig. 4), about 60 km to the NE of the Yangtze Gorges area. This ash bed was collected from a dolostone unit that overlies the lower Doushantuo black shale but underlies an exposure surface representing a mid-doushantuo sequence boundary. A traditional correlation 14 using the mid-doushantuo sequence boundary, biostratigraphic data, and δ 13 C chemostratigraphic data would correlate this ash bed to a horizon within the upper part of Doushantuo Member II in the Yangtze Gorges. Adopting this correlation, the 614±7.6 Ma age gives a direct age constraint on Doushantuo Member II and Lantian Member II. Similarly, a Pb-Pb age of 599±4 Ma 15 has been reported from the upper Doushantuo phosphorite at Weng an, above the mid-doushantuo exposure surface (Supplementary Fig. 4). Again, adopting the traditional correlation between upper Doushantuo phosphorite/dolostone at Weng an and Doushantuo Member III/IV in the Yangtze Gorges 8, the 599±4 Ma age provides a minimum age constraint on Doushantuo Member II. Together, these two ages constrain the mid-doushantuo sequence boundary between 614±7.6 Ma and 599±4 Ma, and provide further support for a 576 Ma minimum age of Doushantuo Member II which lies below the sequence boundary. An alternative correlation has been proposed that the upper Doushantuo dolostone above the mid-doushantuo exposure surface at Zhangcunping and Weng an be correlated with the lower Doushantuo Member II in the Yangtze Gorges area 16. This alternative correlation was motivated by the presumed correlation of EN2 and the associated mid-doushantuo flooding surface or sequence boundary (see Supplementary Fig. 4) with the 582 Ma Gaskiers glaciation 10,16. Not only is this alternative correlation inconsistent with lithostratigraphy and sequence stratigraphy, it is also in disagreement with available biostratigraphic data: the lower Doushantuo Member II in the Yangtze Gorges hosts an acritarch assemblage that is distinct from acritarchs from the upper Doushantuo dolostone at Zhangcunping and upper Doushantuo phosphorite/dolostone at Weng an 13,14,17. Finally, this alternative correlation is inconsistent with chemostratigraphic data (Fig. 1; Supplementary Fig. 4) which show the presence of EP2 in the upper Doushantuo dolostone at Zhangcunping, Weng an, and Yangtze Gorges area 8. We would like to emphasize that the minimum age of 576 Ma for the Lantian biota is derived from the correlation between Lantian and Yangtze Gorges areas; it is corroborated by, but not dependent on, the validity of the traditional correlation between Weng an, Zhangcunping, and Yangtze Gorges areas. Taken at face value, WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 4

a minimum age of 576 Ma still allows a marginal temporal overlap between the Lantian biota and the 579 565 Ma Avalon biota 18-20. However, fossiliferous Lantian Member II is separated from Lantian Member IV (= Doushantuo Member IV, from which the 593±17 Ma age came) by a complete depositional sequence, and the fossiliferous horizon is ~20 m below Lantian Member III. Thus, we consider the Lantian biota is likely older than the Avalon biota 18-20. Beyond South China, the correlation becomes more tenuous, particularly the correlation with the exceptionally dated 582 Ma Gaskiers glaciation in Newfoundland 21. It is widely accepted that EN3 in the Yangtze Gorges area is correlated with the Shuram negative δ 13 C excursion 22-26, but the temporal relationship between the Shuram and the Gaskiers is controversial. Condon et al. 10 and Sawaki et al. 16, partly driven by the assumption that the Shuram event could not have lasted >10 myr, correlated the mid-doushantuo sequence boundary and the associated δ 13 C feature EN2 (=Shuram) with the Gaskiers glaciation. However, this correlation is in direct conflict with the 599±4 Ma Pb-Pb age from Weng an and the 593±17 Ma Re-Os age from the Yangtze Gorges, both from levels above EN2 and above the mid-doushantuo flooding surface 15. Thus, we accept the alternative correlation that EN3 (or Shuram) started 580-600 Ma 22-26 and may have lasted more than 10 myr. Supplementary Figure 3. Ribbon rocks (limestone and dolostone intercalations) in the upper Doushantuo Formation in the Yangtze Gorges area (a) and the upper Lantian Formation in southern Anhui (b). Both are characterized by strongly negative δ 13 C values down to 10. Limestone is light grey in color, whereas dolostone is dark grey [buff color in (a) due to weathering]. Coin in (a) is 21 mm in diameter. WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 5

Supplementary Figure 4. Locality maps and stratigraphic columns, with biostratigraphic, chemostratigraphic, and geochronological data. (a) Yangtze Block (YB) in relation to North China Block (NCB) and Tarim Block (TB). (b) Early Ediacaran facies distribution on Yangtze Block (simplified from Zhu et al. 1 ), showing the localities of Yangtze Gorges (YG), Lantian (LT), Zhangcunping (ZCP), and Weng an (WA). (c) Lantian section. Carbonate δ 13 C data for basal Lantian cap dolostone (EN1) from Zhou et al. 6, and those for upper Lantian Formation from this study (Supplementary Table 1). (d) Jiulongwan (Yangtze Gorges) section. δ 13 C and radiometric dates from previously published data 10,11,27,28. Stratigraphic thickness scale bar applies to the Doushantuo Formation only. DY, Dengying Formation. (e) Weng an section. δ 13 C and radiometric dates from previously published data 15,17,29. Cryo: Cryogenian. (f) Zhangcunping section. Radiometric date from Liu et al. 13. δ 13 C data from this study (Supplementary Table 2). The two acritarch biozones are recognized by McFadden et al. 14. WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 6

3. Estimate of Taxonomic Diversity Yan et al. 30 described 11 taxa of macroscopic carbonaceous compression fossils from the lower Lantian Formation. Later, Chen et al. 31 reported 13 additional species from the same horizon. Yuan et al. 3 carried out a systematic revision of the Lantian fossils. After synonymizing some taxa described by Yan et al. 30 and Chen et al. 31, Yuan et al. 3 estimated that there are 12 forms of macroscopic algal fossils in the Lantian biota, including 10 named taxa and 2 unnamed forms. Our new excavation revealed at least 6 new forms, bringing the total number of morphotaxa to be 18. We realize that the taxonomy of the Lantian fossils is complicated by ontogenetic and preservational issues. For example, as mentioned in the main text, there may be possible ontogenetic relationship between Type A, Type B, and Flabellophyton despite the lack of transitional forms. Also, the same taxon may appear very different depending on how it is compressed, a complication that has been long appreciated by paleontologists working on the Burgess Shale and Chengjiang biotas 32,33. Indeed, a case may be made that some specimens described as Anhuiphyton lineatum in Yuan et al. 3 could represent a species of Flabellophyton compressed top-down (as opposed to sideway or lateral compression typically seen in Flabellophyton species). Realizing these ontogenetic and preservational issues, we estimate that there are ~15 distinct morphotaxa in the Lantian biota. 4. δ 13 C and δ 18 O Data δ 13 C and δ 18 O analysis followed standard procedures described in the literature 34. Fresh carbonate samples were cut into chips. Carbonate powders were made from fresh chips for isotope analysis. CO 2 was extracted using standard offline technique, with powder reacting with concentrated H 3 PO 4 at 25 C for 12 h. Isotope ratios were measured using a Finnigan MAT 253 mass spectrometer at Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. δ 13 C and δ 18 O are reported as deviation from VPDB. Analytical precision is better than 0.1 for δ 13 C and 0.3 for δ 18 O. No effort was made to distinguish dolomite and calcite mineral facies as Zhao and Zheng did 7. δ 18 O values were not corrected for dolomite. WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 7

Supplementary Table 1. Carbonate δ 13 C and δ 18 O values (, VPDB) of the Lantian Formation near Lantian Village in southern Anhui Province. Note that stratigraphic height measurements use a datum at the base of the third member of the upper Lantian Formation, rather than the base of the Lantian Formation. Zhao and Zheng 7 reported similar δ 13 C data (around 10 ) from equivalent strata at a nearby section, but their δ 18 O values (around 20 ) are much lower. They interpreted the extremely low δ 18 O values as evidence for isotope exchange with glacial meltwater. Alternatively, such low δ 18 O values could indicate diagenetic alteration. Regardless, the similar δ 13 C values between the two measured sections suggest that the δ 13 C values were buffered against isotopic re-equilibration despite oxygen isotope exchange. sample # lithology Height (m) δ 13 C VPDB δ 18 O VPDB 10LJL-01 limestone 27.4-10.9-14.1 10LJL-02 limestone 25.9-11.2-14.3 10LJL-03 dolostone 24.4-8.9-9.9 10LJL-04 dolostone 24.0-8.8-9.8 10LJL-05 dolostone 23.5-9.0-6.6 10LJL-06 dolostone 23.1-9.3-7.2 10LJL-07 dolostone 22.8-9.9-7.4 10LJL-09 limestone 17.8-11.9-14.6 10LJL-11 limestone 9.8-9.4-14.8 10LJL-12 limestone 8.8-9.1-15.2 10LJL-13 dolostone 7.8-8.1-8.4 10LJL-14 dolostone 6.3-7.0-9.8 10LJL-15 limestone 4.8-9.7-13.2 10LJL-15A dolostone 4.6-0.7-6.7 10LJL-16 dolostone 4.4-1.0-7.5 10LJL-17 dolostone 4.1-2.8-10.5 10LJL-18 dolostone 3.8-1.9-9.3 10LJL-19 dolostone 3.4-2.2-10.3 10LJL-20 dolostone 1.4 0.0-6.2 10LJL-21 limestone 1.0-5.6-14.3 10LJL-22 dolostone 0.5-2.2-10.5 10LJL-23 dolostone 0.0-7.5-14.6 WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 8

Supplementary Table 2. Carbonate δ 13 C and δ 18 O values (, VPDB) of the Doushantuo and lower Dengying Formations at the Zhangcunping section, Hubei Province. Contact between the Doushantuo Formation and the underlying Nantuo Formation is not well exposed. Stratigraphic height measurements were made using a datum at the base of the exposed Nantuo Formation. sample # Height (m) δ 13 C VPDB δ 18 O VPDB 05WJG-07 3.0-2.0-6.4 05WJG-06 3.3-1.5-6.5 05WJG-05 3.6-0.6-5.5 05WJG-04 3.9-0.4-5.9 05WJG-03 4.2-0.2-5.8 05WJG-02 4.5-0.2-5.8 05WJG-01 4.8-1.3-6.3 05WJG-08 24.0 0.9-5.2 05WJG-09 24.3 2.4-5.9 05WJG-10 24.7 2.2-5.1 05WJG-12 25.3 2.8-5.4 05WJG-13 25.6 2.8-5.4 05WJG-14 25.9 3.4-6.1 05WJG-15 26.2 3.2-5.6 05WJG-16 26.5 2.9-6.3 05WJG-17 26.8 3.0-6.0 05WJG-18 27.1 3.5-5.6 05WJG-19 27.4 3.7-6.3 05WJG-20 27.7 2.6-5.9 05WJG-21 28.0 2.7-5.4 05WJG-22 28.3 2.8-6.0 05WJG-23 28.6 3.2-6.3 05WJG-24 30.0 3.1-5.4 05WJG-25 30.3 2.2-7.2 05WJG-26 30.6 3.4-5.6 05WJG-27 30.9 2.9-6.1 05WJG-28 31.2 2.3-6.4 05WJG-29 31.5 1.2-6.7 05WJG-30 31.8 1.8-6.6 05WJG-31 32.1 0.2-7.9 05WJG-32 32.4 1.5-7.1 05WJG-33 32.7 2.4-6.0 05WJG-34 33.0 2.4-5.7 05WJG-45 34.3 0.6-3.8 ZCP-32 36.0-0.4-4.6 ZCP-33 36.3-1.6-4.3 ZCP-34 36.5 0.9-4.6 WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 9

ZCP-36 38.0 1.6-4.0 ZCP-39 44.0 4.7-5.3 ZCP-40 49.0 4.9-4.6 ZCP-41 59.0 3.8-4.6 ZCP-43 60.0 4.4-4.1 ZCP-44 61.0 5.1-4.6 ZCP-45 62.0 3.4-3.9 ZCP-46 67.0 2.4-4.0 ZCP-47 70.0 5.6-4.0 ZCP-48 71.0 4.8-4.3 ZCP-49 74.0-1.3-1.9 ZCP-51 84.0 4.3-4.1 ZCP-52 85.0 3.4-4.0 ZCP-53 86.0 3.7-3.0 ZCP-54 86.5 3.2-2.6 ZCP-55 86.6 3.1-1.6 ZCP-56 87.6 2.7-1.7 ZCP-57 89.6 3.4-0.5 WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 10

References 1. Zhu, M., Zhang, J. & Yang, A. Integrated Ediacaran (Sinian) chronostratigraphy of South China. Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 254, 7-61 (2007). 2. Bristow, T. F. et al. Mineralogical constraints on the paleoenvironments of the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 106, 13190 13195 (2009). 3. Yuan, X., Li, J. & Cao, R. A diverse metaphyte assemblage from the Neoproterozoic black shales of South China. Lethaia 32, 143-155 (1999). 4. Seilacher, A. Vendobionta and Psammocorallia: lost constructions of Precambrian evolution. Journal of the Geological Society, London 149, 607-613 (1992). 5. Wood, D. A., Dalrymple, R. W. & Narbonne, G. M. Paleoenviromental analysis of the late Neoproterozoic Mistaken Point and Trepassey formations, Southeastern Newfoundland. Can. J. Earth Sci. 40, 1375-1391 (2003). 6. Zhou, C. et al. The Neoproterozoic tillites at Lantian, Xiuning County, Anhui Province. J. Stratigr. 25, 247-252 (2001). 7. Zhao, Y.-Y. & Zheng, Y.-F. Stable isotope evidence for involvement of deglacial meltwater in Ediacaran carbonates in South China. Chem. Geol. 271, 86-100 (2010). 8. Zhou, C. & Xiao, S. Ediacaran δ 13 C chemostratigraphy of South China. Chem. Geol. 237, 89-108 (2007). 9. Jiang, G., Kennedy, M., Christie-Blick, N., Wu, H. & Zhang, S. Stratigraphy, sedimentary structures, and textures of the late Neoproterozoic Doushantuo cap carbonate in South China. J. Sediment. Res. 76, 978-995 (2006). 10. Condon, D. et al. U-Pb ages from the Neoproterozoic Doushantuo Formation, China. Science 308, 95-98 (2005). 11. Zhu, B., Becker, H., Jiang, S.-Y., Pi, D.-H. & Fischer-Gödde, M. Re-Os geochronology of black shales from the Doushantuo Formation, Yangtze Platform, South China. Geol. Soc. Am. Programs Abstracts 42(5), 463 (2010). 12. Kendall, B., Creaser, R. A. & Selby, D. 187 Re 187 Os geochronology of Precambrian organic-rich sedimentary rocks. Geological Society of London Special Publications 326, 85-107 (2009). 13. Liu, P., Yin, C., Gao, L., Tang, F. & Chen, S. New material of microfossils from the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation in the Zhangcunping area, Yichang, Hubei Province and its zircon SHRIMP U-Pb age. Chin. Sci. Bull. 54, 1058-1064 (2009). 14. McFadden, K. A., Xiao, S., Zhou, C. & Kowalewski, M. Quantitative evaluation of the biostratigraphic distribution of acanthomorphic acritarchs in the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation in the Yangtze Gorges area, South China. Precambrian Res. 173, 170-190 (2009). 15. Barfod, G. H. et al. New Lu-Hf and Pb-Pb age constraints on the earliest animal fossils. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 201, 203-212 (2002). 16. Sawaki, Y. et al. The Ediacaran radiogenic Sr isotope excursion in the Doushantuo Formation in the Three Gorges area, South China. Precambrian Res. 176, 46 64 (2010). 17. Zhou, C., Xie, G., McFadden, K., Xiao, S. & Yuan, X. The diversification and extinction of Doushantuo-Pertatataka acritarchs in South China: Causes and biostratigraphic significance. Geol. J. 42, 229-262 (2007). 18. Narbonne, G. M. The Ediacara Biota: Neoproterozoic origin of animals and their ecosystems. Ann. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 33, 421-442 (2005). WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 11

19. van Kranendonk, M. J. in The Concise Geological Time Scale eds J. G. Ogg, G. Ogg, & F. M. Goldstein) 23-36 (Cambridge University Press, 2008). 20. Narbonne, G. M. Modular construction of early Ediacaran complex life forms. Science 305, 1141-1144 (2004). 21. Hoffman, P. F. & Li, Z.-X. A palaeogeographic context for Neoproterozoic glaciation. Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 277, 158 172 (2009). 22. Le Guerroue, E., Allen, P. A., Cozzi, A., Etienne, J. L. & Fanning, M. 50 Myr recovery from the largest negative δ 13 C excursion in the Ediacaran ocean. Terra Nova 18, 147 153 (2006). 23. Fike, D. A., Grotzinger, J. P., Pratt, L. M. & Summons, R. E. Oxidation of the Ediacaran ocean. Nature 444, 744-747 (2006). 24. Halverson, G. P., Hoffman, P. F., Schrag, D. P., Maloof, A. C. & Rice, A. H. N. Toward a Neoproterozoic composite carbon-isotope record. GSA Bulletin 117, 1181-1207; doi: 1110.1130/B25630.25631 (2005). 25. Xiao, S. in From Evolution to Geobiology: Research Questions Driving Paleontology at the Start of a New Century eds P. H. Kelly & R.K. Bambach) 85-104 (The Paleontological Society, 2008). 26. Le Guerroue, E. & Cozzi, A. Veracity of Neoproterozoic negative C-isotope values: The termination of the Shuram negative excursion. Gondwana Res. 17, 653-661 (2010). 27. McFadden, K. A. et al. Pulsed oxygenation and biological evolution in the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 105, 3197 3202 (2008). 28. Jiang, G., Kaufman, A. J., Christie-Blick, N., Zhang, S. & Wu, H. Carbon isotope variability across the Ediacaran Yangtze platform in South China: Implications for a large surface-to-deep ocean δ 13 C gradient. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 261, 303-320 (2007). 29. Chen, D., Dong, W., Zhu, B. & Chen, X. P. Pb-Pb ages of Neoproterozoic Doushantuo phosphorites in South China: Constraints on early metazoan evolution and glaciation events. Precambrian Res. 132, 123-132 (2004). 30. Yan, Y., Jiang, C., Zhang, S., Du, S. & Bi, Z. Research of the Sinian System in the region of western Zhejiang, northern Jiangxi, and southern Anhui provinces. Bull. Nanjing Inst. Geol. Mineral Resources (Chin. Acad. Geol. Sci.) 12, 1-105 (1992). 31. Chen, M., Lu, G. & Xiao, Z. Preliminary study on the algal macrofossils -- Lantian Flora from the Lantian Formation of Upper Sinian in southern Anhui. Bulletin Institute of Geology, Academia Sinica No.7, 252-267 (1994). 32. Whittington, H. B. The Burgess Shale. (Yale University Press, 1985). 33. Hou, X. et al. The Cambrian Fossils of Chengjiang, China: The Flowering of Early Animal Life. (Blackwell Science, 2004). 34. Kaufman, A. J. & Knoll, A. H. Neoproterozoic variations in the C-isotope composition of sea water: Stratigraphic and biogeochemical implications. Precambrian Res. 73, 27-49 (1995). WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE 12