Pedogenic carbonate stable isotope record of environmental change during the Neogene in the southern Great Plains, southwest Kansas, USA: Carbon isotopes and the evolution of C4-dominated grasslands

被引:45
作者
Fox, David L. [1 ]
Honey, James G. [2 ]
Martin, Robert A. [3 ]
Pelaez-Campomanes, Pablo [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota, Dept Geol & Geophys, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
[2] Univ Colorado, Dept Geol Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[3] Murray State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Murray, KY 42071 USA
[4] CSIC, Natl Museum Nat Hist, Dept Paleobiol, Madrid 28006, Spain
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
ATMOSPHERIC CO2; MEADE COUNTY; C-4; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; MIOCENE EXPANSION; RODENT COMMUNITY; OXYGEN ISOTOPES; SOIL CARBONATES; FOSSIL MAMMALS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PALEOSOLS;
D O I
10.1130/B30401.1
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Fossiliferous strata in the Meade Basin (southwest Kansas) preserve numerous superposed mammalian faunas and calcareous paleosols that range in age from the Clarendonian North American Land Mammal Age (NALMA; 12.0-9.0 Ma, early late Miocene) to the early Irvingtonian NALMA (ca. 2.5-ca. 1.0 Ma, early Pleistocene). Faunas from these sections document the evolution of the small mammal community of the modern grassland ecosystem of the region, and the stable isotope composition of paleosol carbonates provides a means by which the environmental context of the evolution of the modern ecosystem may be documented. We used the stable carbon isotope composition (delta C-13 relative to Vienna Peedee belemnite [VPDB]) of 194 pedogenic carbonates from 19 measured sections to reconstruct the history of C-4 grass abundance in the Meade Basin. Paleosol carbonate delta C-13 values reflect the proportion of C-3 (trees, shrubs, cool-climate grasses) and C-4 (warm-climate grasses) plants that grew in an ancient soil and provide a means with which to reconstruct past mammalian habitats. Paleosol carbonate delta C-13 values record a three-phase increase in the abundance of C-4 biomass during the Neogene in the Meade Basin. Late Miocene sections have mean delta C-13 values of -7.6 parts per thousand +/- 0.90 parts per thousand (Clarendonian) and -6.5 parts per thousand +/- 0.31 parts per thousand (Hemphillian NALMA, 9.0-4.9 Ma), consistent with 17% and 26% C-4 biomass, respectively. Miocene delta C-13 values from Meade are statistically identical to published delta C-13 values for Miocene paleosol carbonates elsewhere in the southern Great Plains, supporting the widespread presence of similar to 20% C-4 biomass on average in the region throughout the Miocene. The abundance of C-4 biomass increased between the end of the Hemphillian section and the beginning of the early Blancan NALMA (5.0-3.0 Ma). Early and middle Blancan (3.0-2.5 Ma) carbonates have statistically identical 8'3C values (-4.9 parts per thousand +/- 0.90 parts per thousand and -5.0 parts per thousand +/- 1.10 parts per thousand, respectively), suggesting a stable ecosystem during the early Pliocene, although high delta C-13 variability in densely sampled intervals suggests a high degree of landscape-scale variation in C-4 abundance. The final phase, geochronologically controlled by two well-characterized ashes (Huckleberry Ridge, 2.10 Ma; Cerro Toledo B, 1.47-1.23 Ma) and magnetostratigraphy, is a trend to higher delta C-13 values from the late Blancan to early Irvingtonian (ca. 2.5-ca 1.0 Ma) from -4 parts per thousand at the base of the section to similar to 1 parts per thousand at the top, corresponding to an increase from almost 50% to 65% C-4 biomass. The abundance of C-4 biomass first reaches modern levels for the region (78% +/- 10.9%) around the level of the Cerro Toledo B ash, indicating that a modern-like grassland ecosystem first appeared in the region ca. 1.3 Ma, although delta C-13 values do not remain consistently high through the rest of the section.
引用
收藏
页码:444 / 462
页数:19
相关论文
共 117 条
  • [71] Martin RA, 2002, J PALEONTOL, V76, P1072, DOI 10.1666/0022-3360(2002)076<1072:BLAROT>2.0.CO
  • [72] 2
  • [73] Martin RA, 1999, EVOL ECOL RES, V1, P21
  • [74] Martin Robert A., 2000, Paludicola, V3, P1
  • [75] Martin Robert A., 2003, Coloquios de Paleontologia Volumen Extraordinario, V1, P373
  • [76] McMahon P.B., 2007, US Geological Survey
  • [77] Geochemistry, radiocarbon ages, and paleorecharge conditions along a transect in the central High Plains aquifer, southwestern Kansas, USA
    McMahon, PB
    Böhlke, JK
    Christenson, SC
    [J]. APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY, 2004, 19 (11) : 1655 - 1686
  • [78] Stable carbon and oxygen isotopes in Quaternary soil carbonates as indicators of ecogeomorphic changes in the northern Chihuahuan Desert, USA
    Monger, HC
    Cole, DR
    Gish, JW
    Giordano, TH
    [J]. GEODERMA, 1998, 82 (1-3) : 137 - 172
  • [79] CARBON ISOTOPIC EVIDENCE FOR THE EMERGENCE OF C4 PLANTS IN THE NEOGENE FROM PAKISTAN AND KENYA
    MORGAN, ME
    KINGSTON, JD
    MARINO, BD
    [J]. NATURE, 1994, 367 (6459) : 162 - 165
  • [80] Using SPIRAL (Single Pollen Isotope Ratio AnaLysis) to estimate C3- and C4-grass abundance in the paleorecord
    Nelson, David M.
    Hu, Feng Sheng
    Scholes, Daniel R.
    Joshi, Neeraj
    Pearson, Ann
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2008, 269 (1-2) : 11 - 16