4.8 Article

Basin-scale reconstruction of euxinia and Late Devonian mass extinctions

Journal

NATURE
Volume 615, Issue 7953, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05716-2

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The Devonian-Carboniferous transition signifies a significant shift in the surface environment, primarily attributed to changes in ocean-atmosphere oxidation states resulting from the proliferation of land plants. This led to changes in the hydrological cycle, continental weathering, glacioeustasy, eutrophication, anoxic expansion in epicontinental seas, and mass extinction events. Our comprehensive geochemical dataset from the Bakken Shale in North America documents the stepwise transgressions of toxic euxinic waters into shallow oceans, contributing to Late Devonian extinction events.
The Devonian-Carboniferous transition marks a fundamental shift in the surface environment primarily related to changes in ocean-atmosphere oxidation states(1,2), resulting from the continued proliferation of vascular land plants that stimulated the hydrological cycle and continental weathering(3,4), glacioeustasy(5,6), eutrophication and anoxic expansion in epicontinental seas(3,4), and mass extinction events(2,7,8). Here we present a comprehensive spatial and temporal compilation of geochemical data from 90 cores across the entire Bakken Shale (Williston Basin, North America). Our dataset allows for the detailed documentation of stepwise transgressions of toxic euxinic waters into the shallow oceans that drove a series of Late Devonian extinction events. Other Phanerozoic extinctions have also been related to the expansion of shallow-water euxinia, indicating that hydrogen sulfide toxicity was a key driver of Phanerozoic biodiversity.

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