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Late Cretaceous (Campanian) carbon isotope events, sea-level change and correlation of the Tethyan and Boreal realms

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PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
卷 188, 期 3-4, 页码 215-248

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DOI: 10.1016/S0031-0182(02)00578-3

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Cretaceous; Tunisia; chemostratigraphy; sea-level; transgression; regression

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Carbon stable-isotope stratigraphy provides unique insights into environmental change during the Campanian, the longest (83.5-71.3 Ma), but least well-understood stage of the Late Cretaceous. A new carbon isotope (delta(13)C) profile for a 500-m-thick Campanian-basal Maastrichtian Tethyan pelagic-hemipelagic section near El Kef, northern Tunisia, is calibrated using data from a biostratigraphically well-constrained succession at Kalaat Senan. The general shapes of the Tunisian delta(13)C reference curve and published Tethyan delta(13)C profiles from Elles (Tunisia) and Bidart (SW France), and a Boreal curve for the Trunch borehole (eastern England), are remarkably similar in all three areas. A positive carbon isotope event of +0.2parts per thousand delta(13)C in the mid-Campanian dated at 78.7 Ma and a negative excursion of -0.4 parts per thousand in the upper Campanian at 74.8 Ma can be correlated between Tunisia and England. A positive excursion of +0.3 parts per thousand at 83.7 Ma spans the Santonian-Campanian boundary. These isotope events enable precise inter-regional correlations that are consistent with published nannofossil data. Review of Campanian sea-level data from North Africa, the Middle East and northern Europe indicates that major shifts in delta(13)C profiles coincide with changes in eustatic sea-level. Relatively stable delta(13)C values in the lower Campanian and their long-term fall through the upper Campanian reflect high and then falling eustatic sea-levels, and increased carbonate production. Short-term (similar to600 kyr) positive excursions record greater organic productivity and/or organic matter preservation, and decreased carbonate fluxes during periods of rapid sea-level rise and the drowning of carbonate platforms. Excursions were terminated by falling nutrient supply and increased carbonate deposition associated with epicontinental sea expansion and renewed carbonate platform growth during the late transgression and highstand. Negative excursions are linked principally to reworking of marine and terrestrial organic matter during rapid sea-level fall. Carbon isotope stratigraphy is a powerful tool for correlation which can be used to test the validity of Campanian global biostratigraphic frameworks, and improve our understanding of the nature and timing of Late Cretaceous sea-level change. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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