4.7 Article

Origin and water depth of a newly identified seep carbonate and paleoecology of Bathymodiolus in the Miocene Taishu Group, southwestern Japan

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DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2020.109655

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Chemosynthetic production; Anaerobic methane oxidation; Deep-sea basin; Japan Sea

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The Fukuzaki Limestone is a small limestone lens embedded in siliciclastic Taishu Group rocks on Tsushima Island in the southwestern Japan Sea. A fossil assemblage in this limestone consisting of the bivalve mollusc Bathymodiolus sp. (Bathymodiolinae) was previously inferred, on the basis of the limestone's isolated lenticular occurrence and the chemosynthetic nature of modern Bathymodiolinae, to rely on chemosynthetic production, but conclusive evidence was not provided. Carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur isotope ratios in the limestone and its host rock mudstone were measured to clarify the paleoecology of the fossil assemblage and the formation environment of the limestone. The low delta C-13 (-39.8 parts per thousand to -31.7 parts per thousand) and delta O-18 (-13.8 parts per thousand to -11.9 parts per thousand) values of carbonate of the limestone lens strongly suggest that the limestone is composed of authigenic carbonate rock precipitated from bicarbonate derived from anaerobic oxidation of biogenic or thermogenic methane. The fossil assemblage in the limestone lens is consistent with a chemosynthesis-based animal assemblage harboring thioautotrophic (sulfur-oxidizing) symbionts, and the low delta C-13 and delta S-34 values of total organic carbon and sulfide sulfur, respectively, in the limestone lens and mud layers suggest that they reflect chemosynthetic production using hydrogen sulfide derived from anaerobic methane oxidation by microbes. Furthermore, the stratigraphic position of the lens in the upper part of the Lower Unit of the Taishu Group indicates that it was precipitated at a water depth >800 m (deeper than the lower middle bathyal zone). These findings indicate that a deep-sea basin locally supplied with methane had already formed in the southwestern Japan Sea by rapid subsidence during the opening stage of the Japan Sea (16-17 Ma).

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