1Svetoslav V. Georgiev, 1,2Holly J. Stein, 1,2Judith L. Hannah, 3Charles M. Henderson,
4,5Thomas J. Algeo
1AIRIE Program, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, 80523-1482 CO, USA
2CEED (Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics), University of Oslo, 0316 Oslo, Norway
3Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4, Canada
4Department of Geology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, 45221-0013 OH, USA
5State Key Laboratories of BGEG and GPMR, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China
The geochemical record for the Permian-Triassic boundary in northern latitudes is essential to evaluation of global changes associated with the most profound extinction of life on Earth. We present inorganic and organic geochemical data, and Re-Os isotope systematics in a critical stratigraphic interval of pre- and post-extinction Upper Permian-Lower Triassic sediments from Opal Creek, western Canada (paleolatitude of ∼30°N). We document significant and long-lived changes in Panthalassa seawater chemistry that were initiated during the first of four magmatic or meteoritic inputs to Late Permian seawater, evidenced by notable decreases of Os isotopic ratios upsection.
Geochemical signals indicate establishment of anoxic bottom waters shortly after regional transgression reinitiated sedimentation in the Late Permian. Euxinic signals are most prominent in the Upper Permian sediments with low organic carbon and high sulfur contents, and gradually wane in the Lower Triassic. The observed features may have been generated in a strongly euxinic ocean in which high bacterioplankton productivity sustained prolific microbial sulfate reduction in the sediment and/or water column, providing hydrogen sulfide to form pyrite. This scenario requires nearlycomplete anaerobic decomposition of predominantly labile marine organic matter (OM) without the necessity for a complete collapse of primary marine productivity. Similar geochemical variations could have been achieved by widespread oxidation of methane by sulfate reducers after a methanogenic burst in the Late Permian. Both scenarios could have provided similar kill mechanisms for the latest Permian mass extinction.
Despite the moderate thermal maturity of the section, OM in all studied samples is dominantly terrestrial and/or continentally derived, recycled and refractory ancient OM. We argue that, as such, the quantity of the OM in the section mainly reflects changes in terrestrial vegetation and/or weathering, and not in marine productivity. At Opal Creek, a pyrite layer and <20-cm-thick siltstones that are lean in OM mark dramatic and long-lived inorganic geochemical and stable isotope changes. Initial Os isotope ratios decline markedly toward values of ∼0.35 in the pyrite interval, indicating a mantle-sourced or meteoritic trigger for the intensification and expansion of latest Permian anoxia. Subsequent and stronger magmatic or meteoritic pulses recorded by low initial Os isotopes followed the main extinction.
Reference
Georgiev SV, Holly J. Stein HJ, Judith L. Hannah JL, Charles M. Henderson CM, Thomas J. Algeo TJ (2014)Enhanced recycling of organic matter and Os-isotopic evidence for multiple magmatic or meteoritic inputs to the Late Permian Panthalassic Ocean, Opal Creek, Canada. Geochimica et Cosmochimica (in Press)
Link to Article [doi:10.1016/j.gca.2014.11.019]
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