Uranium and carbon isotopes document global-ocean redox-productivity relationships linked to cooling during the Frasnian-Famennian mass extinction
Uranium and carbon isotopes document global-ocean redox-productivity relationships linked to cooling during the Frasnian-Famennian mass extinction
Geology (Boulder) (October 2017) 45 (10): 887-890
- actinides
- Asia
- biostratigraphy
- C-13/C-12
- carbon
- chemostratigraphy
- China
- Chordata
- Conodonta
- cooling
- Devonian
- Eh
- Famennian
- Far East
- Frasnian
- global change
- Guangxi China
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- Kellwasser event
- lithostratigraphy
- mass extinctions
- metals
- microfossils
- organic compounds
- paleo-oceanography
- paleoclimatology
- Paleozoic
- productivity
- radioactive isotopes
- sea-level changes
- sedimentary rocks
- stable isotopes
- Th/U
- total organic carbon
- U-238/U-235
- Upper Devonian
- uranium
- Vertebrata
- southern China
The cause of the Frasnian-Famennian boundary (FFB) biotic crisis, one of the "Big Five" Phanerozoic mass extinctions, remains poorly understood. Here, we generated a high-resolution uranium-isotope profile (delta (super 238) U) for a marine carbonate section at Baisha, South China, in order to document secular variation in mean global-ocean redox conditions and to compare its relationship to coeval changes in organic carbon burial fluxes (as proxied by delta (super 13) C (sub carb) ) and global climate conditions. delta (super 238) U varied in a coordinated, mostly positive relationship with delta (super 13) C (sub carb) , indicating that expanded (reduced) oceanic anoxia was linked to lower (higher) productivity. This pattern is inconsistent with productivity control of redox conditions and suggests instead that both proxies responded to a common climatic forcing. We infer that climatic cooling (and glaciation during the Upper Kellwasser Horizon [UKH] event) led to better-ventilated oceanic conditions (higher delta (super 238) U) and greater productivity (higher delta (super 13) C (sub carb) ) owing to invigoration of global-ocean overturning circulation and enhanced upwelling. Because the UKH event coincided with the FFB mass extinction, cooling rather than oceanic anoxia may have been the main killing mechanism.