4.7 Article

Early Permian seasonality from bivalve δ18O and implications for the oxygen isotopic composition of seawater

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 11, Pages 1027-1030

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G31330.1

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Funding

  1. Petroleum Research Fund
  2. Committee on Research at the University of California, Los Angeles
  3. Australian Research Grants Scheme

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Oxygen isotope values of sequentially microsampled accretionary carbonate from the thick-shelled calcitic bivalve Eurydesma from the Early Permian of southeastern Australia vary seasonally over 6 yr of growth. Paleotemperature constraints derived from coeval glendonite and ice-rafted clasts, in combination with published biome data, indicate near-freezing winter conditions. However, paleotemperatures calculated from oxygen isotope data are too warm unless the delta O-18 value of seawater approached -4 parts per thousand. Associated stenohaline brachiopods and lack of covariance with delta C-13 argue against significantly reduced salinity, and published delta O-18 data from across Australia suggest that conditions recorded by this bivalve were typical of the Gondwanan high latitudes. The negative delta O-18 value of seawater implied by these data reflects in part the expected meridional gradient in marine seawater composition related to latitudinal variation in evaporation and precipitation in Permian oceans, but is also consistent with previous suggestions of a secular increase in the oxygen isotopic composition of ocean water through the Phanerozoic.

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