University of Southampton OCS (beta), AASP Southampton 2011

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Atmospheric carbon-isotope fluctuations in the Early-Middle Miocene: evidence from terrestrial organic matter, New Jersey shallow shelf, USA (IODP Expedition 313)
Linhao Fang, Stephen Hesselbo

Last modified: 2011-08-16

Abstract


Abstract

The higher land plants (vascular plants) consistently register δ13C signatures from the atmosphere with a nearly constant offset during their life span[1]. Because the phytoclasts in deposits are original from these higher plants, the organic δ13C signals measured in phytoclasts can reflect the atmospheric carbon-isotope signature the time of deposition[2,3]. This study integrates the organic δ13C data sets, C/N ratio, and palynological analysis to explore the relationship between carbon isotopes, sedimentary facies, and inferred relative sea-level changes. In this study, negative δ13C excursions are coincident with the clay-rich strata and higher sea levels, whereas the positive shifts are related with sand-rich strata and relatively lower sea levels. Moreover, due to the relatively rapid atmospheric circulation (ca.10-40 years), the terrestrial carbon-isotope signals registered the δ13C signatures from atmosphere could represent the global carbon-isotope fluctuation[4]. This inference is supported by plausible correlation of the positive and negative carbon-isotope excursions in our terrestrial organic matter to similar fluctuations recorded from oceanic carbonates globally[5], where the strata are equivalent to the Middle Miocene Monterey Event in age[6,7]. However, in strata of early Miocene age the correlations are much less convincing. In this study we explore a range of possible additional influences on phytoclast carbon-isotope composition with a view to strengthening the use of carbon-isotope stratigraphy as a tool for correlation between terrestrial and oceanic stratigraphy.

 

Reference

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  2. Gröcke, D.R., 2002. The carbon isotope composition of ancient CO2 based on higher-plant organic matter, Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. Ser. A: Math. Phys. Sci. 360, 633-658.
  3. Hesselbo, S.P., and Pieńkowski, G. (2011). Stepwise atmospheric carbon-isotope excursion during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (Early Jurassic, Polish Basin). Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 301, 365-372.
  4. Hesselbo, S.P., Gröcke, D.R., Jenkyns, H.C., Bjerrum, C.J., Farrimond, P.L., Morgans-Bell, H.S., and Green, O. (2000). Massive dissociation of gas hydrates during a Jurassic Oceanic Anoxic Event. Nature, 406, 392-395.
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  6. Vincent, E., and Berger, W.H., (1985). Carbon dioxide and polar cooling in the Miocene: the Monterey hypothesis. In: Broecker, W.S., Sundquist, E.T. (Eds.), The Carbon cycle and Atmospheric CO2: Natural variations Archean to Present, Geophys. Monograph Series, vol. 32, AGU, Washington DC, pp. 455-468.
  7. Woodruff, F., and Savin, S., (1991). Mid-Miocene isotope stratigraphy in the deep sea: high resolution correlations, paleoclimatic cycles, and sediment preservation. Paleoceanography 6, 755-806.

Keywords


Carbon-isotope, Sea-level, Stratigraphy, Palynological analysis