4.6 Article

Middle Jurassic terrestrial environmental and floral changes linked to volcanism: Evidence from the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, China

Journal

GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
Volume 223, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2023.104094

Keywords

Middle Jurassic; Terrestrial Qaidam Basin; Palynological fossils; Organic carbon isotope composition; Volcanism

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The study "Relationship between volcanic eruptions and global environmental climate changes during the Middle Jurassic" indicates that during the Middle Jurassic period of the Mesozoic Era, the breakup of Pangaea and rapid opening of the Ligurian and Central Atlantic oceans led to widespread volcanism, which caused significant changes in global environments, climates, and floras. Through detailed sedimentary records, researchers found a close relationship between these changes and volcanic activity, suggesting that the release of large amounts of CO2 and Mercury during volcanic eruptions may be the main cause of these changes.
The breakup of Pangaea and the rapid opening of the Ligurian and Central Atlantic oceans during the Middle Jurassic resulted in widespread volcanism accompanied by significant shifts in global environments, climates, and floras. Although major volcanism is a plausible driver of such global changes, linking these phenomena in the Middle Jurassic is hindered by a lack of detailed sedimentary records from which to evaluate cause and effect. Here, we link Middle Jurassic environmental, climatic, and floral changes with volcanism using records from the Dameigou section of the Qaidam Basin on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. High-resolution chemostratigraphic (813Corg patterns) and biostratigraphic (palynological fossils) data reveal three negative organic carbon isotope excursions (NCIE) at the Aalenian-Bajocian boundary, the Bajocian-Bathonian boundary, and in the middle of the Callovian, respectively. The first two NCIEs (NCIE-I and NCIE-II) were accompanied by relatively warm and humid climatic conditions and coal accumulation. In contrast, the third NCIE (NCIE-III) was accompanied by warm but dry climatic conditions, a decrease in coal accumulation, a decline in plant diversity, the significant decline in fern spore diversity and abundance, and a rapid increase in the abundance of Classopollis pollen (based on petrological, palynological, PCA, Hydrophyte/Xerophyte ratio, and nMDS data). Four sedimentary mercury anomalies (Hg/Al2O3 spikes) have temporal coincidence with the three NCIEs and climate warming events, suggesting a volcanic origin for these. We suggest that volcanism was a key driver of Middle Jurassic change, with major pulses releasing large amounts of CO2 and Hg into the atmosphere, resulting in Hg loading, NCIEs, climatic warming, and floral changes in terrestrial strata. Our multi-proxy study provides new insights into the links between volcanism and terrestrial environmental, climatic, and floral changes during the Middle Jurassic.

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