Carbon-isotope stratigraphy and ammonite faunal turnover for the Middle Jurassic in the Southern Iberian palaeomargin

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_F2FA63A5FF17
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Carbon-isotope stratigraphy and ammonite faunal turnover for the Middle Jurassic in the Southern Iberian palaeomargin
Journal
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Author(s)
O'Dogherty L., Sandoval J., Bartolini A., Bruchez S., Bill M., Guex J.
ISSN-L
0031-0182
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2006
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
239
Pages
311-333
Language
english
Notes
ISI:000241047200005
Abstract
Variations in the stable carbon-isotope ratio of marine and continental
sediments can reflect changes in sink and flux modifications of the
palaeocarbon cycle. Here we report carbon-isotope compositions of Middle
Jurassic marine carbonates from the Betic Cordillera (southern Spain),
which represents an ideal region to link the stable carbon-isotope
curves directly to ammonite zones and subzones, and thereby for the
first time achieve an accurate chronostratigraphic calibration. The five
sections studied represent basin and high swell deposits of the Southern
Iberian palaeomargin. We find a similar delta C-13 of carbonates between
different oceanic areas, suggesting a homogeneous carbon-isotope oceanic
reservoir through the Middle Jurassic. The Aalenian-Bajocian transition
is a critical period in ammonite evolution; hence the Early Jurassic
fauna are replaced by new ammonite families which become dominant
throughout the Middle and Late Jurassic. For this reason, we compared
the delta C-13 values of carbonates with ammonite diversity and
extinction rates at different taxonomical levels in order to explore the
possible relationship between the carbon cycle and ammonite evolution.
The carbon-isotope values of carbonates are not exactly linearly
correlated with the extinction rate and ammonite diversity, but the main
faunal turnovers follow minimum delta C-13 values, where extinct taxa
are replaced by new ones. Likewise, radiation episodes are associated
with increasing delta C-13 values and with transgressive sea-level rise.
All these data support the idea that perturbations in the global carbon
cycle reflect rapid palaeoenvironmental changes. We made detailed
analyses of these faunal turnovers, using them as a proxy to identify
major palaeoenvironmental crises in their ecosystems forced by
modification in the carbon cycle. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V All rights
reserved.
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19/10/2012 16:48
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20/08/2019 17:20
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