Pervasive photic zone euxinia in the northeastern Panthalassic Ocean during the end-Triassic extinction
Abstract
Severe changes in ocean redox, nutrient cycling, and marine productivity accompanied most Phanerozoic mass extinctions. However, evidence for marine photic zone euxinia (PZE) as a globally important extinction mechanism for the end-Triassic extinction (ETE) is currently lacking. Fossil molecular (biomarker) and nitrogen isotopic records from a sedimentary sequence in western Canada provide the first conclusive evidence of PZE and disrupted biogeochemistry in neritic waters of the Panthalassic Ocean during the end Triassic. Increasing water-column stratification and deoxygenation across the ETE led to PZE in the Early Jurassic, paralleled by a perturbed nitrogen cycle and ecological turnovers among noncalcifying groups, including eukaryotic algae and prokaryotic plankton. If such conditions developed widely in the Panthalassic Ocean, PZE might have been a potent mechanism for the ETE.
Más información
| Título de la Revista: | GEOLOGY |
| Volumen: | 43 |
| Editorial: | GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC |
| Fecha de publicación: | 2015 |
| Página de inicio: | 307 |
| Página final: | 3010 |
| Idioma: | English |