首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Carbon-isotope record of the Early Jurassic (Toarcian) Oceanic Anoxic Event from fossil wood and marine carbonate (Lusitanian Basin,Portugal)
Institution:1. University of Oxford, Department of Earth Sciences, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3AN, United Kingdom;2. UMR CNRS 6282 Biogéosciences, Université de Bourgogne, 6 Boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France;1. Chengdu Institute of Geology and Mineral Resources, Chengdu 610081, China;2. Key Laboratory for Sedimentary Basin and Oil and Gas Resources, Ministry of Land and Resources, Chengdu 610081, China;1. Department of Historical Geology and Paleontology, Faculty of Geology and Geoenvironment, National and Kapodistrian Univeristy of Athens, Panepistimiopolis, 15784 Athens, Greece;2. Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon UMR 5276 CNRS, Université Lyon 1, ENS Lyon, Campus de la Doua, Bâtiment Géode, F-69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France;3. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3AN, United Kingdom
Abstract:The Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (OAE) in the Early Jurassic (~ 183 Ma ago) was characterized by widespread near-synchronous deposition of organic-rich shales in marine settings, as well as perturbations to several isotopic systems. Characteristically, two positive carbon-isotope excursions in a range of materials are separated by an abrupt negative shift. Carbon-isotope profiles from Toarcian fossil wood collected in England and Denmark have previously been shown to exhibit this large drop (~ ? 7‰) in δ13C values, interpreted as due to an injection of isotopically light CO2 into the ocean–atmosphere system. However, the global nature of this excursion has been challenged on the basis of carbon-isotope data from nektonic marine molluscs (belemnites), which exhibit heavier than expected carbon-isotope values. Here we present new data, principally from fossil wood and bulk carbonate collected at centimetre scale from a hemipelagic section at Peniche, coastal Portugal. This section is low in organic carbon (average TOC =  0.5%), and the samples should not have suffered significant diagenetic contamination by organic carbon of marine origin. The carbon-isotope profile based on wood shows two positive excursions separated by a large and abrupt negative excursion, which parallels exactly the profile based on bulk carbonate samples from the same section, albeit with approximately twice the amplitude (~ ? 8‰ in wood versus ~ ? 3.5‰ in carbonate). These data indicate that the negative carbon-isotope excursion affected the atmosphere and, by implication, the global ocean as well. The difference in amplitude between terrestrial organic and marine carbonate curves can be explained by greater water availability in the terrestrial environment during the negative excursion, for which there is independent evidence from marine osmium-isotope records and, plausibly, changes in atmospheric CO2 content, for which independent evidence is also available. The Peniche succession is also notable for the occurrence of re-deposited sediments: their lowest occurrence coincides with the base of the negative excursion and their highest occurrence coincides with its top. Thus, slope instability and sediment supply could have been strongly linked to the global environmental perturbation, an association that may misleadingly simulate the effects of sea-level fall.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号