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Volume 1

Biogenic Carbon Kinetics

Mastering the Molecular Pathways of Natural CO2 Stabilization

The atmosphere's future is being rewritten at the molecular level.

Strategic Objectives

• Deconstruct the complex enzyme kinetics of the Calvin Cycle.

• Explore the chemical signaling between roots and soil microbes.

• Identify the metabolic pathways that prevent carbon re-release.

• Master the thermodynamics of biological carbon mineralization.

The Core Challenge

While global emissions rise, our understanding of the precise chemical mechanisms that govern natural carbon capture remains fragmented and underutilized.

01

The Quantum Efficiency of Capture

The First Femtoseconds of Carbon Fixation
You will begin your journey by examining the fundamental energetics of light harvesting, providing you with the essential chemical foundation to understand how energy is converted to stabilize inorganic carbon.
Light as a Molecular Currency
Photons, Energy Quanta, and the Thermodynamic Threshold for Carbon Stabilization

Introduces light not as illumination but as discrete packets of energy capable of driving endergonic chemistry. This section frames the energetic barrier to reducing carbon dioxide and explains why quantum absorption is the indispensable first step in biogenic carbon kinetics.

Pigment Architecture and Spectral Selectivity
Why Chlorophyll Captures What It Does—and Ignores the Rest

Explores the molecular structure of photosynthetic pigments and how their electronic configurations determine absorption spectra. Emphasis is placed on resonance structures, excitation states, and the evolutionary tuning of pigment systems for optimal quantum efficiency.

Excitation and Energy Migration
From Femtosecond Photon Impact to Ordered Energy Transfer

Examines the ultrafast events following photon absorption, including exciton formation and resonance energy transfer within antenna complexes. This section highlights how spatial organization minimizes energy loss and maximizes transfer efficiency to reaction centers.

02

RuBisCO: The Engine of Life

Kinetics and Constraints of the World's Most Abundant Enzyme
You will dive deep into the specific enzymatic mechanism that initiates sequestration, helping you realize why this single protein is the primary bottleneck in global carbon stabilization.
The Molecular Gatekeeper of the Carbon Cycle
Why Global Sequestration Begins with a Single Carboxylation Event

This section frames RuBisCO as the biochemical entry point for inorganic carbon into the biosphere. It situates the enzyme within the Calvin–Benson cycle and establishes its planetary-scale role in transforming atmospheric CO2 into stabilized organic carbon. Rather than cataloging history, the focus is on flux: how the cumulative kinetics of trillions of active sites determine the upper limit of biological carbon drawdown.

Active Site Alchemy
Enediol Formation, Carbamylation, and the Chemistry of CO2 Capture

This section dissects the stepwise catalytic mechanism of RuBisCO, from ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate activation to enediol intermediate formation and CO2 addition. Emphasis is placed on the requirement for carbamylation of a lysine residue and magnesium coordination, revealing how subtle structural constraints govern reaction rates. The enzyme is treated as a kinetic machine whose conformational choreography dictates the speed of sequestration.

Carboxylase Versus Oxygenase
The Competitive Chemistry That Limits Net Carbon Gain

Here the dual reactivity of RuBisCO is explored as the central kinetic bottleneck. The competition between CO2 and O2 at the active site is analyzed in terms of specificity factor, substrate concentration, and temperature dependence. The emergence of photorespiration is presented not as a side note but as a systemic leakage pathway that constrains net carbon stabilization at the planetary scale.

03

The Calvin Cycle Architecture

Mapping the Dark Reactions of Carbon Reduction
You will trace the cyclic pathway of carbon transformation, allowing you to visualize how CO2 is systematically reduced into high-energy organic molecules.
From Atmospheric CO2 to Biochemical Entry Point
Positioning Carbon at the Threshold of Fixation

This section frames the Calvin Cycle as the molecular gateway through which inorganic carbon becomes biologically stabilized. It introduces the spatial context of the stroma, the coupling to light-generated energy carriers, and the kinetic challenge of incorporating gaseous CO2 into an aqueous biochemical network.

Rubisco and the Commitment to Carbon
Carboxylation as the Irreversible Threshold Step

Here the architecture of the cycle begins with the carboxylation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate. The catalytic properties, kinetic limitations, and dual reactivity of Rubisco are examined as determinants of flux, efficiency, and evolutionary compromise in carbon reduction pathways.

Energy Investment and Molecular Rearrangement
Phosphorylation and Reduction of 3-Carbon Intermediates

This section traces the transformation of 3-phosphoglycerate into glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, emphasizing ATP-driven phosphorylation and NADPH-mediated reduction. The thermodynamic directionality and redox choreography are analyzed to clarify how chemical energy is embedded into carbon skeletons.

04

C4 and CAM Alternatives

Evolutionary Chemistry for High-Efficiency Sequestration
You will explore how specialized metabolic adaptations overcome photorespiration, showing you how different chemical strategies optimize carbon capture in diverse environments.
The Photorespiratory Constraint
Why Rubisco Alone Is Not Enough

This section reframes photorespiration as a kinetic bottleneck in natural carbon stabilization. It examines the oxygenation reaction of Rubisco, the energetic penalties of carbon loss, and the environmental triggers that intensified selective pressure for alternative fixation chemistries.

The C4 Innovation
Spatial Separation as a Carbon Concentration Strategy

Here the chapter explores the Hatch–Slack pathway as a chemical pre-processing system that concentrates CO2 around Rubisco. The coordinated roles of mesophyll and bundle sheath cells are presented as a spatial solution to diffusion and enzymatic inefficiency, with emphasis on how four-carbon intermediates act as mobile carbon reservoirs.

Metabolic Logistics of Carbon Shuttling
Malate, Aspartate, and Energetic Trade-Offs

This section analyzes the biochemical transport cycle that powers C4 efficiency. It details how oxaloacetate and malate function as carbon carriers, how decarboxylation regenerates CO2 in specialized tissues, and why ATP investment is justified by reduced photorespiratory losses.

05

Microbial Metamorphosis

Prokaryotic Pathways of Carbon Assimilation
You will discover the non-plant pathways of carbon capture, broadening your perspective on how microorganisms contribute to the global biogenic carbon inventory.
Beyond Photosynthesis
Reframing Carbon Fixation as a Microbial Phenomenon

This section challenges the plant-centric narrative of carbon capture by introducing carbon fixation as a deeply microbial process that predates terrestrial vegetation. It positions prokaryotes as evolutionary pioneers of CO2 assimilation and establishes their central role in shaping Earth’s early and modern carbon cycles.

The Calvin–Benson Framework in Prokaryotic Context
Rubisco Beyond the Leaf

Rather than revisiting plant physiology, this section explores how cyanobacteria and other bacteria deploy the Calvin–Benson cycle in distinct ecological niches. Emphasis is placed on enzyme kinetics, carboxysomes, and the efficiency trade-offs that define microbial CO2 assimilation in aquatic and soil systems.

Reductive Power in the Dark
Chemolithoautotrophic Carbon Entry Points

This section examines carbon fixation pathways that operate independently of light, powered instead by inorganic electron donors such as hydrogen, ammonia, iron, or sulfur compounds. It connects metabolic redox chemistry to carbon stabilization, highlighting how deep-sea vents and subsurface ecosystems expand the geography of carbon capture.

06

The Chemistry of Cellulose Synthesis

Constructing Long-Term Organic Carbon Stores
You will analyze the polymerization of glucose into structural biopolymers, which is critical for you to understand how captured carbon is physically stabilized for decades.
From Atmospheric Carbon to Activated Glucose
Preparing the Monomer for Structural Commitment

This section reframes cellulose synthesis as the final stabilization step of photosynthetically fixed carbon. It examines how glucose derived from carbon fixation is chemically activated into UDP-glucose, positioning it for polymerization. The emphasis is on energetic investment and metabolic channeling as prerequisites for durable carbon storage.

β-1,4-Glycosidic Bond Formation
The Chemical Logic of Linear Polymerization

This section analyzes the stereochemical specificity of β-1,4-glycosidic linkages and explains how this bond geometry enforces linearity. The discussion focuses on how bond orientation prevents branching and promotes extended chain formation, laying the molecular foundation for mechanical strength and long-term carbon retention.

Cellulose Synthase as a Carbon-Polymerization Engine
Membrane-Embedded Catalysis and Chain Elongation

Here the catalytic machinery of cellulose synthase complexes is examined as a controlled extrusion system that polymerizes and translocates glucan chains simultaneously. The section connects enzyme structure, catalytic kinetics, and membrane organization to the rate and scale at which structural carbon accumulates.

07

Lignin and Recalcitrance

The Molecular Shield Against Decomposition
You will investigate the complex phenolic structures that prevent microbial breakdown, teaching you why certain biogenic carbon forms are more permanent than others.
From Structural Polymer to Carbon Fortress
Why Plants Invest in Molecular Complexity

This section reframes lignin not merely as a structural component of vascular plants but as a kinetic strategy for carbon defense. It explores how evolutionary pressures favored the emergence of a heterogeneous aromatic polymer capable of resisting enzymatic attack, thereby extending the residence time of plant-derived carbon in ecosystems.

Phenolic Architecture and Irregular Order
Randomness as a Defensive Design

Here we analyze the three primary monolignols and their radical coupling reactions, showing how stochastic polymerization generates structural irregularity. The absence of a repeating backbone and the diversity of ether and carbon–carbon linkages create a molecular maze that slows microbial recognition and enzymatic access.

Cross-Linking the Cell Wall Matrix
Embedding Recalcitrance into Biomass

This section examines how lignin interpenetrates cellulose and hemicellulose, forming covalent and non-covalent associations that shield polysaccharides from hydrolytic enzymes. The discussion emphasizes how lignification transforms otherwise labile carbohydrates into kinetically protected carbon pools.

08

Rhizosphere Exchange Dynamics

The Chemical Dialogue Between Roots and Soil
You will examine the chemical interface where plant-derived carbon enters the subterranean world, illustrating for you the transition from atmospheric capture to geological storage.
From Leaf to Root Tip
Translating Photosynthetic Carbon into Subsurface Flux

This section traces the kinetic pathway of carbon from atmospheric fixation in leaves to its allocation belowground. Emphasis is placed on phloem transport, carbon partitioning, and the biochemical forms delivered to root tissues. The rhizosphere is introduced not as a static soil zone but as a dynamic extension of plant metabolism where atmospheric carbon first enters the mineral matrix.

The Exudate Spectrum
Molecular Signals, Substrates, and Redox Agents

Here the chapter explores the chemical diversity of compounds released by roots—sugars, amino acids, organic acids, phenolics, and mucilage—and analyzes their kinetic roles. Rather than cataloging compounds, the focus is on functional categories: energy donors, chelators, signaling molecules, and pH modifiers. These exudates are framed as catalysts of carbon transformation and mineral weathering at the soil interface.

Microbial Mediation of Carbon Entry
Symbiosis, Competition, and Carbon Turnover Rates

This section examines how bacteria, fungi, and mycorrhizal networks metabolize plant-derived carbon, transforming labile inputs into microbial biomass and necromass. The kinetic interplay between rapid respiration and stabilization pathways is analyzed, highlighting how microbial community structure regulates whether carbon is mineralized back to CO2 or incorporated into longer-lived soil pools.

09

Soil Organic Matter Formation

Biochemical Pathways of Humification
You will learn the transformative processes that turn decaying matter into stable soil carbon, providing you with a roadmap of carbon's journey into the Earth's crust.
From Litter to Labile Compounds
Initial Decomposition and Microbial Action

Explore how plant residues and organic debris are broken down by microbial communities into simple molecules, setting the stage for more complex humic structures.

Enzymatic Transformations and Intermediate Compounds
The Biochemistry of Decay

Delve into the enzymatic reactions that convert labile compounds into intermediate products, including amino acids, phenolics, and polysaccharides, highlighting the molecular pathways that drive humification.

Humic Substances: Formation and Structure
Assembling Stable Carbon Pools

Examine the synthesis of humic acids, fulvic acids, and humin, detailing how molecular interactions stabilize carbon and create resilient soil organic matter.

10

Glomalin and Fungal Sequestration

The Adhesive Chemistry of the Mycorrhizal Network
You will uncover the role of unique fungal proteins in binding soil particles, demonstrating how biological 'glue' acts as a significant but often overlooked carbon sink.
Fungal Foundations of Soil Carbon
How Mycorrhizal Networks Shape Organic Matter

Explore the structure and ecology of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and their pivotal role in soil aggregation, emphasizing the biological frameworks that facilitate carbon stabilization.

Glomalin: The Sticky Protein
Molecular Properties and Soil Interactions

Dive into the biochemical characteristics of glomalin, its production within fungal hyphae, and the ways it adheres to soil particles to enhance structural integrity and trap carbon.

Mechanisms of Carbon Sequestration
From Microbial Exudates to Long-Term Storage

Analyze the processes through which glomalin contributes to long-term carbon storage, including its resistance to decomposition and role in forming stable soil organic matter.

11

Microbial Carbon Pump Mechanisms

The Deep Ocean and Terrestrial Parallels
You will evaluate how microbial residues are transformed into inert molecules, giving you a clear picture of long-term biogenic sequestration beyond living biomass.
Foundations of the Microbial Carbon Pump
From Active Microbes to Lasting Carbon

Introduce the concept of the microbial carbon pump (MCP), explaining how microbial metabolism converts labile organic matter into more stable, recalcitrant carbon compounds in aquatic and soil environments.

Deep Ocean Carbon Stabilization
Mechanisms Under the Waves

Explore how MCP operates in the deep ocean, including microbial transformation pathways, the role of dissolved organic matter, and the persistence of microbial residues over centuries to millennia.

Terrestrial MCP Analogues
Soil Microbial Residues and Persistent Carbon

Examine terrestrial parallels to the ocean MCP, highlighting how soil microbes contribute to the stabilization of organic matter and formation of humic substances that resist decomposition.

12

Enzymatic Depolymerization

The Kinetics of Carbon Release and Retention
You will study the rates of reaction that govern carbon breakdown, allowing you to model and predict the stability of biogenic stores under varying conditions.
Fundamentals of Enzymatic Carbon Breakdown
Understanding the molecular actors in depolymerization

Introduce the key enzymes responsible for breaking down biogenic polymers, highlighting their structure-function relationships and specificity toward carbon-containing substrates.

Reaction Kinetics and Carbon Flux
Quantifying rates of depolymerization

Examine how reaction rates are measured and modeled in the context of carbon release, including Michaelis-Menten kinetics and factors influencing enzymatic efficiency.

Environmental Modulators of Enzyme Activity
Temperature, pH, and substrate availability

Explore how external conditions affect depolymerization rates and the retention of carbon, with examples from soil and aquatic ecosystems.

13

Pyrogenic Carbon Chemistry

The Stability of Biochar and Black Carbon
You will analyze the thermochemical conversion of biomass into highly stable aromatic structures, showing you a pathway for engineered biogenic sequestration.
Introduction to Pyrogenic Carbon
Defining Black Carbon and Biochar

Explore the origins and significance of pyrogenic carbon, differentiating between naturally formed black carbon and engineered biochar, and their roles in carbon sequestration.

Thermochemical Transformation of Biomass
From Organic Matter to Aromatic Structures

Detail the pyrolysis processes, reaction conditions, and chemical pathways that convert biomass into stable aromatic carbon structures, emphasizing reaction kinetics and temperature effects.

Molecular Architecture of Stable Carbon
Chemical Features that Resist Degradation

Analyze the structural properties of biochar and black carbon, including aromaticity, porosity, and functional groups, explaining why these features contribute to long-term stability in soils and sediments.

14

Carbonate Mineralization

Biological Pathways to Geological Permanence
You will explore how organisms facilitate the precipitation of minerals, helping you understand the ultimate transition from organic carbon to inorganic stone.
Introduction to Biological Mineralization
From Living Systems to Rock Formations

Introduce the concept of carbonate mineralization, highlighting the role of living organisms in converting dissolved carbon into stable mineral forms. Set the stage for understanding how organic carbon transitions into geological structures.

Mechanisms of Carbonate Precipitation
Molecular and Cellular Pathways

Examine the biochemical processes that lead to carbonate formation, including enzyme-mediated reactions, ion transport, and nucleation sites within biological tissues.

Key Organisms Driving Mineralization
From Microbes to Marine Life

Explore the diversity of organisms that facilitate carbonate deposition, such as calcifying bacteria, algae, corals, and mollusks, emphasizing their ecological and biochemical strategies.

15

Isotopic Tracing of Carbon

Using Carbon-13 to Map Molecular Flow
You will master the analytical techniques used to track carbon atoms through metabolic pathways, empowering you to verify sequestration efficiency with precision.
Fundamentals of Carbon Isotopes
Understanding Carbon-13 and Its Natural Abundance

Introduce the properties of carbon isotopes, focusing on carbon-13. Discuss isotopic ratios, natural abundance, and how these form the basis for tracing molecular carbon flows.

Principles of Isotopic Labeling
Mapping Carbon Through Metabolic Networks

Explain how carbon-13 labeling works in biological systems. Cover the conceptual framework for incorporating labeled atoms into metabolic substrates to follow their fate.

Experimental Design and Labeling Strategies
Choosing Pathways, Labels, and Controls

Detail strategies for designing carbon tracing experiments, including selection of target metabolites, labeling patterns, and control experiments to ensure data reliability.

16

Metabolic Flux Analysis

Quantifying the Rate of Biogenic Stabilization
You will learn how to calculate the actual volume of carbon moving through biological systems, giving you the mathematical tools to quantify sequestration potential.
From Concentrations to Currents
Why Carbon Pools Do Not Reveal Carbon Movement

This section reframes carbon stabilization as a problem of rates rather than static quantities. It explains why metabolite concentrations alone cannot reveal sequestration capacity and introduces flux as the true currency of biogenic carbon kinetics. Readers are guided to think of biological systems as dynamic flow networks where carbon is continuously partitioned, transformed, and either respired or stabilized.

Constructing the Carbon Flow Network
Stoichiometric Matrices as Sequestration Maps

Here the biochemical pathway is translated into a quantitative framework using stoichiometric coefficients. Readers learn how to construct the stoichiometric matrix, define system boundaries, and represent carbon atoms as conserved quantities across reactions. The section emphasizes carbon balance equations as the structural backbone for quantifying stabilization potential.

Solving for Intracellular Carbon Flux
Linear Constraints and the Feasible Flux Space

This section develops the mathematical machinery required to compute flux distributions under steady-state conditions. It explains how linear algebraic constraints define a solution space of feasible fluxes and how biological assumptions narrow this space. The reader learns how to interpret underdetermined systems and how flux solutions relate to measurable carbon throughput.

17

The Role of Phytoliths

Microscopic Silica-Carbon Encapsulation
You will investigate how plants trap carbon within silica structures, providing you with an example of an incredibly durable, naturally occurring sequestration mechanism.
Silica as a Biological Carbon Vault
Reframing Phytoliths as Kinetic Endpoints

Introduces phytolith formation as a terminal stabilization pathway in plant carbon kinetics. Positions silica deposition not merely as structural reinforcement but as a biochemical strategy that immobilizes organic carbon within a mineral matrix, altering decomposition trajectories.

From Dissolved Silicic Acid to Solid Microstructures
Cellular Transport and Precipitation Dynamics

Examines how plants absorb soluble silica from soil, transport it through vascular tissues, and precipitate it within specific cells. Emphasizes the physicochemical conditions that enable encapsulation of organic molecules during silica polymerization.

Carbon Entrapment Mechanisms Within Silica Matrices
Occlusion, Adsorption, and Molecular Isolation

Analyzes how carbon becomes embedded in phytoliths through physical occlusion and surface interactions. Distinguishes between structural carbon, occluded organic matter, and chemically bound fractions, linking these mechanisms to long-term stability.

18

Peatland Chemistry

Anaerobic Stabilization and Carbon Preservation
You will examine the unique chemical conditions of waterlogged environments that halt carbon oxidation, teaching you how environmental chemistry dictates sequestration longevity.
Hydrological Isolation as a Chemical Barrier
Water Saturation and the Exclusion of Oxygen

This section reframes peatlands as chemically insulated reactors where persistent waterlogging restricts oxygen diffusion and fundamentally alters carbon oxidation pathways. It explores how saturation creates diffusion limits, lowers redox potential, and initiates the kinetic slowdown that distinguishes peat accumulation from typical soil respiration.

Redox Cascades and the Suppression of Aerobic Decay
From Oxygen Depletion to Methanogenic Thresholds

Focusing on electron acceptor hierarchies, this section analyzes how sequential reduction processes replace oxygen as the terminal electron sink. It explains how nitrate, iron, sulfate, and eventually carbon dioxide govern microbial energetics, and how the resulting redox stratification stabilizes partially decomposed plant polymers.

Acidity, Phenolics, and Enzymatic Inhibition
Chemical Self-Defense of Peat Matrices

This section examines how acidic pH and phenolic compounds derived from mosses and vascular plants inhibit extracellular enzymes responsible for lignin and cellulose breakdown. It connects chemical toxicity and low nutrient availability to suppressed microbial metabolism, illustrating how peatlands engineer their own biochemical preservation.

19

Exudate Composition and Stability

The Impact of Root Chemistry on Microbe Behavior
You will analyze the specific organic acids and sugars secreted by plants, showing you how these molecules prime or inhibit carbon stabilization in the soil.
Chemical Signatures at the Root–Soil Interface
Exudates as Active Drivers of Carbon Fate

Frames root exudation as a kinetic control point in soil carbon stabilization. Introduces the rhizosphere as a chemically dynamic boundary layer where plant-derived molecules determine whether carbon is rapidly respired or incorporated into stable soil pools.

Organic Acids as Mineral Reactivity Modulators
Chelation, pH Shifts, and Carbon Protection Pathways

Analyzes low–molecular weight organic acids such as citrate, malate, and oxalate as regulators of mineral dissolution and metal chelation. Explores how these acids liberate nutrients while simultaneously influencing organo–mineral associations that stabilize or destabilize soil carbon.

Sugars as Microbial Priming Signals
Readily Available Carbon and the Acceleration Effect

Examines monosaccharides and disaccharides released by roots as fast-energy substrates that stimulate microbial growth. Connects sugar pulses to the priming effect, demonstrating how labile inputs can accelerate decomposition of existing soil organic matter and alter net carbon balance.

20

Synthetic Biology and Carbon Fixation

Engineering Enhanced Chemical Pathways
You will explore the cutting edge of designer metabolic pathways, allowing you to envision how we might chemically 'upgrade' natural sequestration processes.
From Natural Carbon Fixation to Designed Biochemistry
Reframing Photosynthesis as an Engineering Substrate

This section positions natural carbon fixation pathways as modifiable chemical infrastructures rather than fixed biological traits. It introduces the engineering mindset of synthetic biology and explains how carbon-assimilating organisms can be treated as programmable platforms for enhanced CO2 stabilization.

Standardized Biological Parts for Carbon Chemistry
Genetic Circuits, Modular Enzymes, and Pathway Assembly

This section explores how standardized DNA components, regulatory elements, and modular enzyme systems enable the construction of custom carbon fixation circuits. Emphasis is placed on how genetic circuits can dynamically regulate carbon flux to maximize sequestration efficiency under changing environmental conditions.

Metabolic Engineering Beyond the Calvin Cycle
Designing Alternative and Hybrid Carbon Assimilation Routes

Here the chapter examines the redesign of central metabolism to incorporate synthetic or optimized carbon fixation pathways. It discusses pathway rerouting, flux balancing, and the integration of non-native enzymatic steps to create faster or more thermodynamically favorable routes for carbon stabilization.

21

The Thermodynamics of a Cool Planet

Entropy and the Future of Biogenic Chemistry
You will conclude by synthesizing the laws of energy and matter to understand the global impact of molecular sequestration, leaving you with a holistic view of Earth's chemical balance.
Energy as the Currency of Carbon Stability
Reframing Planetary Cooling Through the First Law

This section interprets energy conservation as the governing constraint behind carbon transformation. It connects photosynthesis, respiration, and long-term sequestration to the redistribution of internal energy, showing how biogenic pathways do not create stability but reorganize energy flows within Earth’s open system.

Entropy and the Architecture of Order
Why Molecular Complexity Does Not Violate the Second Law

Here, entropy is reframed as the driver of planetary directionality rather than disorder alone. The section explains how localized decreases in entropy—such as the formation of stable carbon compounds—are enabled by greater entropy production elsewhere, positioning life as an entropy-accelerating mechanism that paradoxically stabilizes carbon.

Free Energy Landscapes of Sequestration
Gibbs Energy and the Feasibility of Long-Term Carbon Storage

This section analyzes carbon fixation, mineralization, and organic burial through free energy criteria. By examining Gibbs free energy and chemical potential, it clarifies why certain sequestration pathways persist over geological timescales while others remain transient.

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