Volcanism, Impacts, and Mass Extinctions: Causes and Effects

Atmospheric halogen and acid rains during the main phase of Deccan eruptions: Magnetic and mineral evidence
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Published:September 01, 2014
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CiteCitation
Eric Font, Sébastien Fabre, Anne Nédélec, Thierry Adatte, Gerta Keller, Cristina Veiga-Pires, Jorge Ponte, José Mirão, Hassan Khozyem, Jorge E. Spangenberg, 2014. "Atmospheric halogen and acid rains during the main phase of Deccan eruptions: Magnetic and mineral evidence", Volcanism, Impacts, and Mass Extinctions: Causes and Effects, Gerta Keller, Andrew C. Kerr
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Environmental changes linked to Deccan volcanism are still poorly known. A major limitation resides in the paucity of direct Deccan volcanism markers and in the geologically short interval where both impact and volcanism occurred, making it hard to evaluate their contributions to the mass extinction. We investigated the low-magnetic-susceptibility interval just below the iridium-rich layer of the Bidart (France) section, which was recently hypothesized to be the result of paleoenvironmental perturbations linked to paroxysmal Deccan phase 2. Results show a drastic decrease of detrital magnetite and presence of scarce akaganeite, a hypothesized reaction product formed in the aerosols derived from reaction of a volcanic plume with water and oxygen in the high atmosphere. A weathering model of the consequences of acidic rains on a continental regolith reveals nearly complete magnetite dissolution after ~31,000 yr, which is consistent with our magnetic data and falls within the duration of the Deccan phase 2. These results highlight the nature and importance of the Deccan-related environmental changes leading up to the end- Cretaceous mass extinction.
- acid rain
- aerosols
- akaganeite
- Aquitaine
- Atlantic Ocean
- atmospheric precipitation
- basalts
- Bay of Biscay
- C-13/C-12
- Cantabrian Basin
- carbon
- chemostratigraphy
- clastic sediments
- climate change
- correlation
- Cretaceous
- Deccan Traps
- Deep Sea Drilling Project
- DSDP Site 525
- EDS spectra
- effusion
- equations
- eruptions
- Europe
- flood basalts
- France
- gases
- global change
- Gubbio Italy
- halogens
- Iberian Peninsula
- igneous rocks
- IPOD
- iron oxides
- isothermal remanent magnetization
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- Italy
- large igneous provinces
- Leg 74
- lithostratigraphy
- Maestrichtian
- magnetic properties
- magnetic susceptibility
- magnetite
- magnetization
- magnetostratigraphy
- marker beds
- Mesozoic
- mineral composition
- North Atlantic
- O-18/O-16
- oxides
- oxygen
- paleoatmosphere
- paleoenvironment
- paleomagnetism
- paleotemperature
- Perugia Italy
- PHREEQC
- physical properties
- rain
- regolith
- remanent magnetization
- sand
- sediments
- SEM data
- South Atlantic
- Southern Europe
- Spain
- spectra
- stable isotopes
- Umbria Italy
- Upper Cretaceous
- volcanic rocks
- volcanism
- Walvis Ridge
- Western Europe
- X-ray spectra
- Bidart France
- numerical weathering model
- Erretegia Beach