학술논문

Isotopic evidence for changes in the zinc cycle during Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (Late Cretaceous)
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 46(5):463-466
Subject
12|Stratigraphy
alkaline earth metals
anaerobic environment
Apennines
C-13/C-12
calcium
carbon
carbonate rocks
case studies
Cenomanian
chemostratigraphy
Cretaceous
depositional environment
East Sussex England
England
Europe
Great Britain
Guerrero Mexico
isotope ratios
isotopes
Italy
marine environment
Mesozoic
metals
Mexico
OAE 2
oceanic anoxic events
paleo-oceanography
radioactive isotopes
sedimentary rocks
Southern Apennines
Southern Europe
stable isotopes
Sussex England
Turonian
United Kingdom
Upper Cretaceous
Western Europe
zinc
Zn-66/Zn-65
Zn/Ca
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
Widespread deposition of organic-rich shales during the Late Cretaceous Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE 2, ca. 94 Ma) occurred during a period of significant global paleo-environmental and geochemical change. It has been proposed that an increase in nutrient input to the ocean during OAE 2 was the key mechanism that generated and sustained high rates of organic-matter burial over time scales of 103-105 yr. Zinc is a bio-essential micronutrient and the proportion of Zn burial in oxic sediments relative to burial in organic-rich continental margin sediments is reflected in its seawater isotope composition. The first Zn-isotope records dating from the Cretaceous are presented here from three coeval carbonate successions: two from Europe (southern England and southern Italy) and one from southern Mexico. The new data show reproducible stratigraphic Zn-isotope patterns in spatially and lithologically diverse carbonate successions. Excursions to lower Zn-isotope values may be linked to the input of magmatic Zn, changes in the proportion of Zn burial into organic-rich sediments, and the liberation of previously buried Zn during an episode of widespread seafloor re-oxygenation during OAE 2 (the Plenus Cold Event).