학술논문

Chuar Group of the Grand Canyon; record of breakup of Rodinia, associated change in the global carbon cycle, and ecosystem expansion by 740 Ma
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 28(7):619-622
Subject
12|Stratigraphy
absolute age
acritarchs
algae
Arizona
C-13/C-12
carbon
carbon cycle
chemostratigraphy
Chuar Group
Chuaria
Chuaria circularis
Coconino County Arizona
continental drift
dates
depositional environment
ecosystems
geochemical cycle
geochemistry
Grand Canyon
isotope ratios
isotopes
lithofacies
marine environment
microfossils
Mohave County Arizona
Neoproterozoic
nesosilicates
orthosilicates
paleo-oceanography
paleoecology
paleomagnetism
palynomorphs
Plantae
plate tectonics
Precambrian
problematic fossils
problematic microfossils
Proterozoic
rifting
Rodinia
sedimentary rocks
sedimentary structures
shallow-water environment
silicates
stable isotopes
syntectonic processes
tephrochronology
U/Pb
United States
upper Precambrian
zircon
zircon group
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
The Chuar Group (∼1600 m thick) preserves a record of extensional tectonism, ocean-chemistry fluctuations, and biological diversification during the late Neoproterozoic Era. An ash layer from the top of the section has a U-Pb zircon age of 742±6 Ma. The Chuar Group was deposited at low latitudes during extension on the north-trending Butte fault system and is inferred to record rifting during the breakup of Rodinia. Shallow-marine deposition is documented by tide- and wave-generated sedimentary structures, facies associations, and fossils. C isotopes in organic carbon show large stratigraphic variations, apparently recording incipient stages of the marked C isotopic fluctuations that characterize later Neoproterozoic time. Upper Chuar rocks preserve a rich biota that includes not only cyanobacteria and algae, but also heterotrophic protists that document increased food web complexity in Neoproterozoic ecosystems. The Chuar Group thus provides a well-dated, high-resolution record of early events in the sequence of linked tectonic, biogeochemical, environmental, and biological changes that collectively ushered in the Phanerozoic Eon.