Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events

The end of the Palaeozoic is marked by two mass-extinction events during the Middle Permian (Capitanian) and the Late Permian (Changhsingian). Given similarities between the two events in geochemical signatures, such as large magnitude negative C-13 anomalies, sedimentological signatures such as cla...

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Main Authors: Sheldon, Nathan D, Chakrabarti, Ramananda, Retallack, Gregory J, Smith, Roger MH
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: WILEY-BLACKWELL 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/50227/
http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1111/sed.12117
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spelling ftiiscindia:oai:eprints.iisc.ernet.in:50227 2023-05-15T13:47:08+02:00 Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events Sheldon, Nathan D Chakrabarti, Ramananda Retallack, Gregory J Smith, Roger MH 2014 http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/50227/ http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1111/sed.12117 unknown WILEY-BLACKWELL Sheldon, Nathan D and Chakrabarti, Ramananda and Retallack, Gregory J and Smith, Roger MH (2014) Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events. In: SEDIMENTOLOGY, 61 (6). pp. 1812-1829. Centre for Earth Sciences Journal Article PeerReviewed 2014 ftiiscindia 2014-11-14T23:12:53Z The end of the Palaeozoic is marked by two mass-extinction events during the Middle Permian (Capitanian) and the Late Permian (Changhsingian). Given similarities between the two events in geochemical signatures, such as large magnitude negative C-13 anomalies, sedimentological signatures such as claystone breccias, and the approximate contemporaneous emplacement of large igneous provinces, many authors have sought a common causal mechanism. Here, a new high-resolution continental record of the Capitanian event from Portal Mountain, Antarctica, is compared with previously published Changhsingian records of geochemical signatures of weathering intensity and palaeoclimatic change. Geochemical means of discriminating sedimentary provenance (Ti/Al, U/Th and La/Ce ratios) all indicate a common provenance for the Portal Mountain sediments and associated palaeosols, so changes spanning the Capitanian extinction represent changes in weathering intensity rather than sediment source. Proxies for weathering intensity chemical index of alteration, W and rare earth element accumulation all decline across the Capitanian extinction event at Portal Mountain, which is in contrast to the increased weathering recorded globally at the Late Permian extinction. Furthermore, palaeoclimatic proxies are consistent with unchanging or cooler climatic conditions throughout the Capitanian event, which contrasts with Changhsingian records that all indicate a significant syn-extinction and post-extinction series of greenhouse warming events. Although both the Capitanian and Changhsingian event records indicate significant redox shifts, palaeosol geochemistry of the Changhsingian event indicates more reducing conditions, whereas the new Capitanian record of reduced trace metal abundances (Cr, Cu, Ni and Ce) indicates more oxidizing conditions. Taken together, the differences in weathering intensity, redox and the lack of evidence for significant climatic change in the new record suggest that the Capitanian mass extinction was not triggered by dyke injection of coal-beds, as in the Changhsingian extinction, and may instead have been triggered directly by the Emeishan large igneous province or by the interaction of Emeishan basalts with platform carbonates. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore: ePrints@IIsc Portal Mountain ENVELOPE(159.167,159.167,-78.100,-78.100) The Portal ENVELOPE(159.167,159.167,-78.100,-78.100)
institution Open Polar
collection Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore: ePrints@IIsc
op_collection_id ftiiscindia
language unknown
topic Centre for Earth Sciences
spellingShingle Centre for Earth Sciences
Sheldon, Nathan D
Chakrabarti, Ramananda
Retallack, Gregory J
Smith, Roger MH
Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events
topic_facet Centre for Earth Sciences
description The end of the Palaeozoic is marked by two mass-extinction events during the Middle Permian (Capitanian) and the Late Permian (Changhsingian). Given similarities between the two events in geochemical signatures, such as large magnitude negative C-13 anomalies, sedimentological signatures such as claystone breccias, and the approximate contemporaneous emplacement of large igneous provinces, many authors have sought a common causal mechanism. Here, a new high-resolution continental record of the Capitanian event from Portal Mountain, Antarctica, is compared with previously published Changhsingian records of geochemical signatures of weathering intensity and palaeoclimatic change. Geochemical means of discriminating sedimentary provenance (Ti/Al, U/Th and La/Ce ratios) all indicate a common provenance for the Portal Mountain sediments and associated palaeosols, so changes spanning the Capitanian extinction represent changes in weathering intensity rather than sediment source. Proxies for weathering intensity chemical index of alteration, W and rare earth element accumulation all decline across the Capitanian extinction event at Portal Mountain, which is in contrast to the increased weathering recorded globally at the Late Permian extinction. Furthermore, palaeoclimatic proxies are consistent with unchanging or cooler climatic conditions throughout the Capitanian event, which contrasts with Changhsingian records that all indicate a significant syn-extinction and post-extinction series of greenhouse warming events. Although both the Capitanian and Changhsingian event records indicate significant redox shifts, palaeosol geochemistry of the Changhsingian event indicates more reducing conditions, whereas the new Capitanian record of reduced trace metal abundances (Cr, Cu, Ni and Ce) indicates more oxidizing conditions. Taken together, the differences in weathering intensity, redox and the lack of evidence for significant climatic change in the new record suggest that the Capitanian mass extinction was not triggered by dyke injection of coal-beds, as in the Changhsingian extinction, and may instead have been triggered directly by the Emeishan large igneous province or by the interaction of Emeishan basalts with platform carbonates.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Sheldon, Nathan D
Chakrabarti, Ramananda
Retallack, Gregory J
Smith, Roger MH
author_facet Sheldon, Nathan D
Chakrabarti, Ramananda
Retallack, Gregory J
Smith, Roger MH
author_sort Sheldon, Nathan D
title Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events
title_short Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events
title_full Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events
title_fullStr Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events
title_full_unstemmed Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events
title_sort contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the middle and late permian extinction events
publisher WILEY-BLACKWELL
publishDate 2014
url http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/50227/
http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1111/sed.12117
long_lat ENVELOPE(159.167,159.167,-78.100,-78.100)
ENVELOPE(159.167,159.167,-78.100,-78.100)
geographic Portal Mountain
The Portal
geographic_facet Portal Mountain
The Portal
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation Sheldon, Nathan D and Chakrabarti, Ramananda and Retallack, Gregory J and Smith, Roger MH (2014) Contrasting geochemical signatures on land from the Middle and Late Permian extinction events. In: SEDIMENTOLOGY, 61 (6). pp. 1812-1829.
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