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Palaeolatitudinal distribution of lithologic indicators of climate in a palaeogeographic framework

Wenchao Cao, Simon Williams, Nicolas Flament, Sabin Zahirovic, Christopher Scotese and R. Dietmar Mueller
Palaeolatitudinal distribution of lithologic indicators of climate in a palaeogeographic framework (in Advances in paleogeography, G. Meinhold (prefacer))
Geological Magazine (February 2019) 156 (2): 331-354

Abstract

Whether the latitudinal distribution of climate-sensitive lithologies is stable through greenhouse and icehouse regimes remains unclear. Previous studies suggest that the palaeolatitudinal distribution of palaeoclimate indicators, including coals, evaporites, reefs and carbonates, has remained broadly similar since the Permian period, leading to the conclusion that atmospheric and oceanic circulation control their distribution rather than the latitudinal temperature gradient. Here we revisit a global-scale compilation of lithologic indicators of climate, including coals, evaporites and glacial deposits, back to the Devonian period. We test the sensitivity of their latitudinal distributions to the uneven distribution of continental areas through time and to global tectonic models, correct the latitudinal distributions of lithologies for sampling- and continental area-bias, and use statistical methods to fit these distributions with probability density functions and estimate their high-density latitudinal ranges with 50% and 95% confidence intervals. The results suggest that the palaeolatitudinal distributions of lithologies have changed through deep geological time, notably a pronounced poleward shift in the distribution of coals at the beginning of the Permian. The distribution of evaporites indicates a clearly bimodal distribution over the past approximately 400 Ma, except for Early Devonian, Early Carboniferous, the earliest Permian and Middle and Late Jurassic times. We discuss how the patterns indicated by these lithologies change through time in response to plate motion, orography, evolution and greenhouse/icehouse conditions. This study highlights that combining tectonic reconstructions with a comprehensive lithologic database and novel data analysis approaches provide insights into the nature and causes of shifting climatic zones through deep time.


ISSN: 0016-7568
EISSN: 1469-5081
Coden: GEMGA4
Serial Title: Geological Magazine
Serial Volume: 156
Serial Issue: 2
Title: Palaeolatitudinal distribution of lithologic indicators of climate in a palaeogeographic framework
Title: Advances in paleogeography
Affiliation: University of Sydney, School of Geosciences, Sydney, N.S.W., Australia
Affiliation: Keele University, Keele, United Kingdom
Pages: 331-354
Published: 201902
Text Language: English
Publisher: Cambridge University Press, London, United Kingdom
References: 81
Accession Number: 2019-021273
Categories: StratigraphySolid-earth geophysics
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 1 table
Secondary Affiliation: University of Wollongong, AUS, AustraliaNorthwestern University, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Cambridge University Press. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201913
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