TY - JOUR
T1 - Deep marine records of Deccan Trap volcanism before the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) mass extinction
AU - Sinnesael, Matthias
AU - Percival, Lawrence M.E.
AU - Schulz, Toni
AU - Vellekoop, Johan
AU - Goderis, Steven
AU - Daems, Kato
AU - Gao, Yue
AU - Leermakers, Martine
AU - Montanari, Alessandro
AU - Coccioni, Rodolfo
AU - Koeberl, Christian
AU - Claeys, Philippe
N1 - Funding Information:
M. Sinnesael thanks the Research Foundation of Flanders (FWOTM782). L.M.E. Percival thanks the Research Foundation of Flanders (FWO grants 12P4519N and 12P4522N) for funding. J. Velle-koop thanks the Research Foundation of Flanders (12Z6621N) and is funded by the Belgian Science Policy Offce (BELPSO) through the FED-tWIN project MicroPAST (Prf-2020-038). A. Montanari thanks the nonproft association \u201CLe Montagne di San Francesco,\u201D www.coldigioco.org, for logistical support. We thank Jan Smit for providing the Elles samples, Niels J. de Winter for assistance with X-ray fuorescence measurement of Al2O3 concentrations, David Verstraeten for assistance with lab work, and students Lo\u00EFc Peltot and Marharyta Krauchuk for assistance with Hg concentration measurements. We thank Ambre Luguet and Markus Lagos from the Steinmann Institute for their assistance during HSE measurements. P. Claeys, S. Goderis, Y. Gao, and M. Leermakers thank the VUB Strategic Research Program. This work is funded by CycloNet (FWO grant W000522N). We thank the editors and reviewers Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink and Alcides N. Sial for constructive comments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Geological Society of America.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The Cretaceous−Paleogene boundary is marked by a large impact and coeval mass extinction event that occurred 66 m.y. ago. Contemporaneous emplacement of the volcanic Deccan Traps also affected global climate before, during, and after the mass extinction. Many questions remain about the timing and eruption rates of Deccan volcanism, its precise forcing of climatic changes, and its signature in the marine geochemical sedimentary proxy record. Here, we compile new and existing mercury (Hg) concentration and osmium isotope (187Os/188Os) records for various stratigraphic sections worldwide. Both geochemical proxies have been suggested to reflect past variations in Deccan volcanic activity. New data from deep marine pelagic carbonate records are compared to contemporaneous records from shallower marine sites correlated through high-resolution cyclostratigraphic age models. The robustness of the proxy records is evaluated on a common timeline and compared to two different Deccan eruption history scenarios. Results show that the global 187Os/188Os signal is clearly reproducible, while the global Hg record does not form a consistent pattern. Moreover, the deep marine sections investigated do not record clear variations in the Hg cycle, particularly in the latest Cretaceous, prior to the extinction event. A detailed reevaluation of the precise depth of the redistribution of impactor-sourced platinum group elements does not exclude the possibility of a minor drop in 187Os/188Os corresponding with a pulse of Deccan volcanism ∼50,000 years before the Cretaceous−Paleogene boundary. Simple Os isotope mass balance modeling indicates that the latest Cretaceous was marked by significant levels of basalt weathering. CO2 sequestration during this weathering likely overwhelmed the emission of Deccan volatiles, thereby contributing to the end of the late Maastrichtian warming.
AB - The Cretaceous−Paleogene boundary is marked by a large impact and coeval mass extinction event that occurred 66 m.y. ago. Contemporaneous emplacement of the volcanic Deccan Traps also affected global climate before, during, and after the mass extinction. Many questions remain about the timing and eruption rates of Deccan volcanism, its precise forcing of climatic changes, and its signature in the marine geochemical sedimentary proxy record. Here, we compile new and existing mercury (Hg) concentration and osmium isotope (187Os/188Os) records for various stratigraphic sections worldwide. Both geochemical proxies have been suggested to reflect past variations in Deccan volcanic activity. New data from deep marine pelagic carbonate records are compared to contemporaneous records from shallower marine sites correlated through high-resolution cyclostratigraphic age models. The robustness of the proxy records is evaluated on a common timeline and compared to two different Deccan eruption history scenarios. Results show that the global 187Os/188Os signal is clearly reproducible, while the global Hg record does not form a consistent pattern. Moreover, the deep marine sections investigated do not record clear variations in the Hg cycle, particularly in the latest Cretaceous, prior to the extinction event. A detailed reevaluation of the precise depth of the redistribution of impactor-sourced platinum group elements does not exclude the possibility of a minor drop in 187Os/188Os corresponding with a pulse of Deccan volcanism ∼50,000 years before the Cretaceous−Paleogene boundary. Simple Os isotope mass balance modeling indicates that the latest Cretaceous was marked by significant levels of basalt weathering. CO2 sequestration during this weathering likely overwhelmed the emission of Deccan volatiles, thereby contributing to the end of the late Maastrichtian warming.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000298784&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1130/B37446.1
DO - 10.1130/B37446.1
M3 - Article
SN - 0016-7606
VL - 137
SP - 1116
EP - 1132
JO - GSA Bulletin
JF - GSA Bulletin
IS - 3-4
M1 - 37446
ER -