4.6 Article

Facies stacking and distribution in the Gabbs Formation (Late Triassic, west-Central Nevada, USA): An environmental baseline to the end-Triassic carbonate crisis

Journal

SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
Volume 425, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2021.106021

Keywords

Triassic/Jurassic boundary; Facies; Carbonate ramp; Mixed systems; Sequence stratigraphy; Panthalassa

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [1654008]
  2. Geological Society of America
  3. Association of Applied Paleontological Sciences

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The Gabbs Formation in west-central Nevada provides a valuable record of carbonate crisis and mass extinction events during the Late Triassic to early Jurassic period. The study reveals the gradual disappearance of carbonate facies and multiple sedimentary cycles, offering a more precise timeline of environmental upheaval during the latest Triassic period.
The primarily carbonate Gabbs Formation of west-central Nevada, U.S.A., remains an important, rare example of Panthalassan shallow-marine environments from the Late Triassic and through the Triassic-Jurassic boundary. Its relevance as a locality persists, particularly as the end-Triassic mass extinction interval is increasingly recognized as a carbonate crisis, evidenced by the global decline of carbonate facies and calcareous marine organisms. However, important transitions across key stratigraphic boundaries in this region have tended to be evaluated in isolation, producing an incomplete picture of sedimentation through the duration of the Late Triassic leading up to the geochemical crises and mass extinction at the close of the Triassic. In this work, multiple correlative measured sections are used to describe the facies in the mixed carbonate-siliciclastic ramp and characterize controls on carbonate facies. The outer ramp transition to inner ramp facies of the Gabbs represent a transgressive-regressive-transgressive cycle culminating in a transition to terrigenous inputs and a gradual decline of carbonate sediments stratigraphically below the mass extinction interval. This predictable loss of carbonate facies and the near continuous deposition of the Gabbs Formation allow for evidence of facies changes and acidifying conditions in the latest Triassic to be considered independently, in contrast to other global Late Triassic sections where depositional hiatuses or abrupt facies changes often compound these records. Establishing a baseline sedimentation for the Late Triassic demonstrates that the final loss of carbonate facies can be decoupled from the onset of acidifying conditions, resulting in a more precise timeline of latest Triassic environmental upheaval. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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