Abstract
Milankovitch cycles (obliquity, eccentricity and precession) result in changes in the distribution of solar energy over seasons, as well as over latitudes, on time scales of ten thousands of years to millions of years. These changing patterns in insolation have induced significant variations in Earth’s past climate over the last 4.5 billion years. Cyclostratigraphy and astrochronology utilize the geologic imprint of such quasi-cyclic climatic variations to measure geologic time. In recent years, major improvements of the Geologic Time Scale have been proposed through the application of cyclostratigraphy, mostly for the Mesozoic and Cenozoic. However, the field of Paleozoic cyclostratigraphy and astrochronology is still in its infancy and the application of cyclostratigraphic techniques in the Paleozoic allows for a whole new range of research questions. For example, unraveling the timing and pacing of environmental changes over the Late Devonian mass extinction on a 105-year time-scale concerns such a novel research question.
Here, we present a global cyclostratigraphic framework for late Frasnian to early Famennian climatic and environmental change, through the integration of globally distributed sections. The backbone of this relative time scale consists of previously published cyclostratigraphies for western Canada and Poland. We elaborate this Euramerican base by integrating new multi-proxy data from the Iowa basin (USA) and Belgium (XRF, magnetic susceptibility and carbon isotope records). These proxy records reveal a clear imprint of astronomical climate forcing, which is in agreement with biostratigraphic constraints. Next, we expand this well-established cyclostratigraphic framework towards the Paleo-Tethys Ocean, using magnetic susceptibility and carbon isotope records from the Fuhe section in South China. The resulting global cyclostratigraphic framework implies an important refinement of the late Frasnian to early Famennian stratigraphy, but also allows for an evaluation of the role of astronomical forcing in perturbing the global carbon cycle and pacing anoxic conditions throughout the Late Devonian mass extinction event.
Here, we present a global cyclostratigraphic framework for late Frasnian to early Famennian climatic and environmental change, through the integration of globally distributed sections. The backbone of this relative time scale consists of previously published cyclostratigraphies for western Canada and Poland. We elaborate this Euramerican base by integrating new multi-proxy data from the Iowa basin (USA) and Belgium (XRF, magnetic susceptibility and carbon isotope records). These proxy records reveal a clear imprint of astronomical climate forcing, which is in agreement with biostratigraphic constraints. Next, we expand this well-established cyclostratigraphic framework towards the Paleo-Tethys Ocean, using magnetic susceptibility and carbon isotope records from the Fuhe section in South China. The resulting global cyclostratigraphic framework implies an important refinement of the late Frasnian to early Famennian stratigraphy, but also allows for an evaluation of the role of astronomical forcing in perturbing the global carbon cycle and pacing anoxic conditions throughout the Late Devonian mass extinction event.
| Original language | English |
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| Publication status | Published - 6 Jul 2016 |
| Event | IGCP591 Closing Meeting Ghent 2016 - Het Pand, Ghent, Belgium Duration: 5 Jul 2016 → 9 Jul 2016 http://www.igcp591.ugent.be/index.php/home/programme/ |
Conference
| Conference | IGCP591 Closing Meeting Ghent 2016 |
|---|---|
| Country/Territory | Belgium |
| City | Ghent |
| Period | 5/07/16 → 9/07/16 |
| Internet address |