4.7 Article

Expanded marine anoxia at the Cambrian-Ordovician transition: Evidence from lime mudstone I/Ca and 8238U signatures of the GSSP in western Newfoundland, Canada

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 155, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2023.106408

Keywords

Iodine; Calcium; Uranium; Marine redox condition; CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE-O boundary GSSP

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, the I/Ca records from slope lime mudstones of the Green Point Formation in western Newfoundland were analyzed to explore the oceanic redox conditions at the CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE-O boundary. The results suggest the presence of shallow marine oxic-anoxic interfaces in the region, which may have contributed to the slow marine biodiversity accumulation during the early Paleozoic.
The early Paleozoic witnessed two spectacular radiations of marine organisms-the Cambrian (CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE) Explosion and the Great Ordovician (O) Biodiversification Event. However, the period between them was characterized by a marine biodiversity plateau attributed to recurring biocrises. In the current study, we present the I/Ca records from slope lime mudstones of the Green Point Formation in western Newfoundland, along with a three-sink Uisotope mass balance model and previously reported limestone 8238Ucarb signals of the same interval, to further explore oceanic redox conditions at the CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE-O boundary. The I/Ca ratios of the lime mudstones, deposited along the eastern Laurentian (western Iapetan) continental slope, exhibit a narrow range between 0.02 and 0.33 & mu;mol/mol. Poor correlations between the I/Ca values and their [Sr], 818O, Mn/Sr, Fe/Sr, Mg/Ca, and 813Corg counterparts, together with near-micritic textures of the limestones, argue against significant influences of postdepositional alterations on the I/Ca signatures. The iodine-depleted lime mudstones, with I/Ca values well below the Proterozoic Eon baseline I/Ca ratios (-0.5-1 & mu;mol/mol), suggest the presence of shallow marine oxic-anoxic interfaces along the regional continental margin. Substantially low limestone I/Ca ratios (<0.5 & mu;mol/mol) and dysoxic to anoxic depositional conditions have also been reported from several other age-equivalent sections deposited along the shelf and slope of ancient Iapetan and Laurentian continental margins. As a result, seawaters surrounding the Iapetan and Laurentian continental margins at the CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE-O transition might have been commonly poorly oxygenated with shallow oxyclines or expanded oxygen minimum zones in the shelf and/or slope areas. This interpretation is further supported by our three-sink U-isotopemass balance modeling, which predicts widespread marine anoxia at the CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE-O boundary with anoxic to euxinic water covering 1.0-21.1% of the ocean floor, significantly higher than the modern day (-0.2%). Furthermore, the wide range of the oceanic 8238UOC (-1.22 to - 0.25 & PTSTHOUSND;) values, estimated from the limestone 8238Ucarb signals, might reflect oceanic redox oscillations during this period. However, the 8238UOC fluctuations could also be attributed to variable accumulations of the 238U-enriched authigenic U phases during early diagenesis. Overall, evidence from the lime mudstone I/Ca ratios and the estimated extent of marine anoxia at the CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER UKRAINIAN IE-O boundary in this study aligns with earlier viewpoints that the slowness of marine biodiversity accumulation during the late Cambrian and the Early Ordovician was linked to widespread oceanic anoxia.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available