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surface area and potential energy, should           Emergence of         Emergence of paired
         correlate with increases in sedimentary flux        blueschist & UHP     high dT/dP & interm. dT/dP
                                                             metamorphism
                                                                                  metamorphism
         into Earth’s oceans. Analysis of Phanerozoic   8  Snow         Snow             Wilson     A
                                                        ball
                                                                         ball
         sedimentary rock records suggests that         Earth           Earth             cycle
         increasing sedimentary flux correlates with                                      onset
         increases in  Sr/ Sr ratios in marine lime-                                                  20
                  87
                      86
         stones (Hay et al., 2001). Detrital zircon age   12
         peaks have been attributed to increases in            Boring billion
         sedimentary flux associated with wide-
         spread continental collisions and convergent   Yb/Gd                                              % S-Type
         margin magmatism (Campbell and Allen,     16
         2008; McKenzie et al., 2016). However, other                                                 10
         authors have favored increases in preserva-
         tion for these age peaks (Hawkesworth et
         al., 2009), and zircon abundance does not   20
         always correlate with increases in  Sr/ Sr
                                       86
                                    87
         ratios in Earth’s oceans over time (Fig. 1B).                                                0
          Increases in sedimentary flux derived
         from weathering of a greater proportion of      P  G   R   N           Su   K   Wilson     B
                                                                                          cycle
         elevated continental crust should, however,   1.0                    Sc          onset       0
         occur associated with an increase in flysch           Boring billion
         deposition. Flysch successions include inter-
         bedded graywackes and shales rich in quartz   0.8                                            500
         and feldspars, which, when water-saturated,
         are  fertile  sources for  the  generation  of
         S-type granites (Collins and Richards, 2008;   Th/Yb  0.6                                    1000
         Zhu et al., 2020). Thus, S-type granite pro-
         duction may serve as a proxy for previous
         intervals of increased flysch deposition. We                                              4.0  1500
         identified zircons that are likely to have been   0.4
         derived from S-type granite using the trace            NOE            GOE  O              Atmosphere   O 2  (atm)
         element discrimination procedure of Zhu et              O 2           O 2  2                 2000
         al. (2020), wherein S-type granites typically   0.2                                      0
         have elevated phosphorus concentrations rel-  Rift-Drift Rift-Drift  Rift-Drift  K  Wilson  C
         ative to I-type granites because apatite   1.9  P  G   R   N         Sc Su       cycle
         [Ca (PO ) (OH,F,Cl)] crystallization is sup-                                     onset       140
           5
               4 3
         pressed in the S-type magmas. To test the
         hypothesis that the peaks in crustal thickness   1.5
         were associated with an increase in S-type            Boring billion
         granites, we integrated S-type zircons iden-                                                 51
         tified within our data set with those found   U/Yb                                                 Number of Passive Margins
         through an examination of zircons from 52   1.1                                              38
         of Earth’s major rivers (Zhu et al., 2020).
         Peaks in S-type zircon percentages overlap                                                   25
         or even postdate the latter stage of increases   0.7
         in crustal thickness identified here (Fig. 3A).                                              12
         Thus, increasing radiogenic Sr input into
         Earth’s oceans appears to be related to (1) the   0.3                                        0
         weathering of a greater proportion of radio-  0        1.0       2.0        3.0       4.0
         genic rocks produced and exposed as the                          Age (Ga)
         crust thickened during the Paleoproterozoic
         and Neoproterozoic time intervals, and (2)   Figure 3. (A) Average Yb/Gd (crustal thickness proxy) compared to the percentage of S-type zircons
         concomitant increases in continental weath-  with its 95% confidence envelope. (B) Th/Yb (crustal input proxy) compared to a global compilation of
         ering and sedimentary flux into the oceans.  ages versus temperature/pressure (T/P) (°C/GPa) of high dT/dP (granulite−ultrahigh temperature
                                             [UHP])  (red);  intermediate  dT/dP  (eclogite−high-pressure  granulite)  (purple);  and  low  dT/dP  (high-
          The  results  reviewed  above  provide   pressure−UHP) metamorphism (blue) from Brown and Johnson (2018). (C) U/Yb (crustal input and fluid
         important confirmation that increases in Sr   input proxy) compared to a global compilation of passive margin abundance from Bradley (2008).
                                             Tenure of supercontinent/cratons from Bradley (2011), increases in atmospheric oxygen, early “whiffs”
         recorded in marine carbonates correlate   of oxygen (green arrows) and intervening boring billion from Holland (2006) and Lyons et al. (2014), and
         with first-order changes in convergent mar-  snowball Earth glaciations adapted from Sobolev and Brown (2019). Supercontinent/craton
                                             abbreviations: K—Kenor; Su—Superia; Sc—Sclavia; N—Nuna; R—Rodina; G—Gondwana; P—Pangea.
         gin tectonism over time (Bataille et al.,   NOE—Neoproterozoic oxygenation event; GOE—Great oxygenation event.

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