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What triggered the Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME)? Perspectives from geobiology and biogeochemical modeling
Zhang, Junpeng(张俊鹏)1,2,3,4; Lyons, Timothy W.3,4; Li, Chao(李超)1,2,5; Fang, Xiang(方翔)1,2; Chen, Qing(陈清)1,2; Botting, Joseph1,2,6; Zhang, Yuandong(张元动)1,2,5
2022-09-01
Source PublicationGLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
ISSN0921-8181
Volume216Pages:15
Abstract

Recent studies have described an oceanic anoxic event during the Hirnantian (HOAE) and linked this event to the Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME). However, the extent and duration of the HOAE remain under debate, as do questions about how oceanic anoxia impacted marine ecosystems. For this study, we investigated two pre-viously unstudied sections adjacent to the open ocean in South China for iron speciation data and sulfur isotope signatures of pyrite and carbonate associated sulfate. Combined with published results, these data provide a view of both local and global oceanic redox landscapes during this interval. Previous work has challenged the idea that increased oxygen solubility under colder temperatures was the critical control of glacial marine oxygenation. Here we describe oxygenated Hirnantian shallow-water environments impacted by the effects of glacio-eustatic variation and deep-water anoxia induced by an enhanced biological pump. Decreased isotopic fractionation between seawater sulfate and sedimentary pyrite has the potential to reveal a period of low oceanic sulfate levels and helps to constrain the duration and style of oceanic redox evolution during the HOAE. Moreover, our modeling work suggests another possibility that the Hirnantian sulfur cycle shifted less than +3 parts per thousand within 1 Ma as a result of decreased silicate weathering, increased volcanism, and enhanced pyrite burial. Correlations with data for marine faunal diversity are somewhat inconsistent with previous assertions that oceanic anoxia triggered the LOME. Nonetheless, cool-water tolerant animals (especially within benthos) may have suffered from oxygen -deficient seawater and lethal metal levels within their limited ecospace much later in the middle of the Hir-nantian. Recovery or proliferation of some portions of the marine ecosystem coincided with oscillating redox conditions at the end of glaciation, including the deep-water Anji sponge-dominated benthic faunas. Our findings contribute new insights into the processes operating during the LOME and, more generally, the evolutionary interactions between OAEs and mass extinctions over Earth history.

KeywordHirnantian oceanic anoxic event Deep -water anoxia Low -sulfate oceans Sulfur cycle Mass extinction
DOI10.1016/j.gloplacha.2022.103917
Indexed BySCI
Language英语
WOS KeywordCARBONATE-ASSOCIATED SULFATE ; SULFUR ISOTOPE EVIDENCE ; REDOX CONDITIONS ; SOUTH CHINA ; SEA-LEVEL ; SILURIAN TRANSITION ; SEAWATER CHEMISTRY ; SECULAR VARIATION ; YANGTZE REGION ; GLOBAL CLIMATE
Funding ProjectNational Natural Science Foundation in China[41802023] ; National Natural Science Foundation in China[42030510] ; Chinese Academy of Sciences[XDB26000000] ; Natural Science Foundation in Jiangsu Province[BK20171103] ; National Science and Technology Major Project[2017ZX05036-001- 004] ; China Scholarship Council ; NASA Astrobiology Institute[NNA15BB03A] ; NASA Interdisciplinary Consortia for Astrobiology Research
WOS Research AreaPhysical Geography ; Geology
WOS SubjectGeography, Physical ; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WOS IDWOS:000844409300003
Funding OrganizationNational Natural Science Foundation in China ; Chinese Academy of Sciences ; Natural Science Foundation in Jiangsu Province ; National Science and Technology Major Project ; China Scholarship Council ; NASA Astrobiology Institute ; NASA Interdisciplinary Consortia for Astrobiology Research
PublisherELSEVIER
Document Type期刊论文
Identifierhttp://ir.nigpas.ac.cn/handle/332004/41158
Collection中国科学院南京地质古生物研究所
Corresponding AuthorZhang, Junpeng(张俊鹏)
Affiliation1.Chinese Acad Sci, Nanjing Inst Geol & Palaeontol, State Key Lab Palaeobiol & Stratig, Nanjing 210008, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
2.Chinese Acad Sci, Ctr Excellence Life & Paleoenvironm, Nanjing 210008, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
3.Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
4.Univ Calif Riverside, Alternat Earths Astrobiol Team, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
5.Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China
6.Amgueddfa Cymru Natl Museum Wales, Dept Nat Sci, Cathays Pk, Cardiff CF10 3LP, Wales
First Author AffilicationNanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeonotology,CAS
Corresponding Author AffilicationNanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeonotology,CAS
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Zhang, Junpeng,Lyons, Timothy W.,Li, Chao,et al. What triggered the Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME)? Perspectives from geobiology and biogeochemical modeling[J]. GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE,2022,216:15.
APA Zhang, Junpeng.,Lyons, Timothy W..,Li, Chao.,Fang, Xiang.,Chen, Qing.,...&Zhang, Yuandong.(2022).What triggered the Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME)? Perspectives from geobiology and biogeochemical modeling.GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE,216,15.
MLA Zhang, Junpeng,et al."What triggered the Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME)? Perspectives from geobiology and biogeochemical modeling".GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE 216(2022):15.
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