4.7 Article

The earliest Phanerozoic carbonate hardground (Cambrian Stage 5, Series 3): Implications to the paleoseawater chemistry and early adaptation of hardground fauna

Journal

PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
Volume 440, Issue -, Pages 172-179

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2015.07.043

Keywords

Hardground; Calcite sea; Cambrian Series 3; North China Platform

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF-2014K2A2A2000787]
  2. Korea University Grant
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41302077, 41290260]
  4. KOPRI fund [PE15030]
  5. Korea Institute of Marine Science & Technology Promotion (KIMST) [PE15030] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Carbonate hardgrounds are lithified seafloors formed by synsedimentary cementation of carbonate sediments, which dominantly occur during the period of calcite seas. The earliest typical Phanerozoic hardground known until now was reported from the Furongian of USA, which was suggested to indicate onset of the early Paleozoic calcite sea period. In this study, we report hardgrounds from the early and middle parts of the Cambrian Series 3 (Stage 5 and Drumian) of the North China Platform, which predate previously reported hardgrounds. The hardground surfaces developed on oolitic grainstone, oncolitic wackestone, and microbialite (thrombolite and dendrolite), which sharply truncate the underlying deposits. The radial fibrous calcite cements between the carbonate grains below the hardground surfaces indicate that the cements formed by early marine cementation. EPMA analysis reveals that the fibrous cements typically consist of low-Mg calcite. The hardgrounds are sometimes encrusted by microbialites and coated by hematite, suggesting long exposure to the open seawater after formation of the surface. In addition, detailed review on the sedimentological studies of Cambrian Series 3 to Furongian deposits throughout the world reveals that there may be several other hardgrounds during these times, which could have been overlooked. The abundant occurrence of hardgrounds in Cambrian Series 3 deposits suggests that the general paleoseawater chemistry was suitable to induce synsedimentary cementation of low-Mg calcite, implying that seawater chemistry would have changed from the aragonite to calcite seas during the Cambrian Series 3 or even earlier period. Metazoan encrustors and macroborers possibly could not have adapted to the newly appeared substrate condition yet, until the latest Cambrian Series 3. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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