The Upper Ordovician Guttenberg delta (super 13) C excursion (GICE) in North America and Baltoscandia; occurrence, chronostratigraphic significance, and paleoenvironmental relationships
The Upper Ordovician Guttenberg delta (super 13) C excursion (GICE) in North America and Baltoscandia; occurrence, chronostratigraphic significance, and paleoenvironmental relationships (in The Ordovician Earth system, Stanley C. Finney (editor) and William B. N. Berry (editor))
Special Paper - Geological Society of America (2010) 466: 37-67
- Baltic region
- biostratigraphy
- biozones
- C-13/C-12
- carbon
- chemostratigraphy
- chronostratigraphy
- Conodonta
- Estonia
- Europe
- geochemistry
- glacial environment
- global
- Gondwana
- Graptolithina
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- K-bentonite
- microfossils
- North America
- Ordovician
- paleoenvironment
- Paleozoic
- Scandinavia
- stable isotopes
- Sweden
- United States
- Upper Ordovician
- Western Europe
- GICE
- Guttenberg Isotope Carbon Excursion
- Guttenberg event
Two prominent, and apparently globally distributed, delta (super 13) C excursions have been documented from the Upper Ordovician, namely the early Katian Guttenberg isotope carbon excursion (GICE) and the latest Ordovician Hirnantian isotope carbon excursion (HICE). The former excursion, which has lower delta (super 13) C values than the HICE, is now recorded from dozens of localities in North America and Baltoscandia, and it appears to be present also in China. In North America the GICE ranges from the uppermost Phragmodus undatus Midcontinent Conodont Zone to near the top of the Plectodina tenuis Midcontinent Conodont Zone, an interval corresponding to the lower part of the Diplacanthograptus caudatus Global Graptolite Zone. The base of the GICE lies somewhat above the Millbrig K-bentonite. In Baltoscandia the GICE occurs in the upper Diplograptus foliaceus through the lower Dicranograptus clingani Graptolite Zones, and in the upper Amorphognathus tvaerensis Conodont Zone. Its base is a few meters above the widespread Kinnekulle K-bentonite. In Baltoscandia and in Oklahoma the GICE ranges through a part of the Spinachitina cervicornis Chitinozoan Zone. In North America the GICE is regionally in a transgressive-regressive succession. The bathymetric conditions in the GICE interval in Baltoscandia were somewhat complex and have been the subject of different interpretations, but there is no obvious correlation between the GICE and apparent sea level changes. A review of the relations between the GICE and potential climatic and water temperature indicators, such as lithofacies, faunas, and (super 18) O geochemistry, does not suggest a close correlation to specific environmental conditions. The cause of formation of the GICE is enigmatic, but there is no direct evidence that it was coeval with a period of extensive glaciation in the Gondwana. The GICE is a powerful chemostratigraphic tool that is useful for detailed local and even transatlantic correlations.