4.6 Article

High influx of carbon in walls of agglutinated foraminifers during the Permian-Triassic transition in global oceans

Journal

INTERNATIONAL GEOLOGY REVIEW
Volume 57, Issue 4, Pages 411-427

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/00206814.2015.1010610

Keywords

carbon; Permian-Triassic transition; lead isotopes; foraminifers; Vietnam; pyrite clusters

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR-0745393]
  2. Vietnam Institute of Geophysics

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The Permian-Triassic mass extinction is postulated to be related to the rapid volcanism that produced the Siberian flood basalt (Traps). Unrelated volcanic eruptions producing several episodes of ash falls synchronous with the Siberian Traps are found in South China and Australia. Such regional eruptions could have caused wildfires, burning of coal deposits, and the dispersion of coal fly ash. These eruptions introduced a major influx of carbon into the atmosphere and oceans that can be recognized in the wall structure of foraminiferal tests present in survival populations in the boundary interval strata. Analysis of free specimens of foraminifers recovered from residues of conodont samples taken at a Permian-Triassic boundary section at Lung Cam in northern Vietnam has revealed the presence of a significant amount of elemental carbon, along with oxygen and silica, in their test wall structure, but an absence of calcium carbonate. These foraminifers, identified as Rectocornuspira kalhori, Cornuspira mahajeri, and Earlandia spp. and whose tests previously were considered to be calcareous, are confirmed to be agglutinated, and are now referred to as Ammodiscus kalhori and Hyperammina deformis. Measurement of the Pb-207/Pb-204 ratios in pyrite clusters attached to the foraminiferal tests confirmed that these tests inherited the Pb in their outer layer from carbon-contaminated seawater. We conclude that the source of the carbon could have been either global coal fly ash or forest fire-dispersed carbon, or a combination of both, that was dispersed into the Palaeo-Tethys Ocean immediately after the end-Permian extinction event.

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