CARBONATES IN SKELETON-POOR SEAS: NEW INSIGHTS FROM CAMBRIAN AND ORDOVICIAN STRATA OF LAURENTIA

被引:113
作者
Pruss, Sara B. [1 ]
Finnegan, Seth [2 ]
Fischer, Woodward W. [3 ]
Knoll, Andrew H. [4 ]
机构
[1] Smith Coll, Dept Geosci, Northampton, MA 01063 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Dept Geol & Environm Sci, Stanford, CA 94022 USA
[3] CALTECH, Div Geol & Planetary Sci, Pasadena, CA 91125 USA
[4] Harvard Univ, Dept Organism & Evolutionary Biol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
关键词
ST-GEORGE GROUP; UNITED-STATES CALIFORNIA; AU PORT GROUP; WESTERN NEWFOUNDLAND; SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHY; SEAWATER CHEMISTRY; RANGE PROVINCE; GRAND CYCLES; NAMA GROUP; MIDDLE;
D O I
10.2110/palo.2009.p09-101r
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
Calcareous skeletons evolved as part of the greater Ediacaran-Cambrian diversification of marine animals. Skeletons did not become permanent, globally important sources of carbonate sediment, however, until the Ordovician radiation. Representative carbonate facies in a Series 3 (510501 501 Ma) Cambrian to Tremadocian succession from western Newfoundland, Canada, and Ordovician successions from the Ibex area, Utah, USA, show that, on average, Cambrian and Tremadocian carbonates contain much less skeletal material than do post-Tremadocian sediments. Petrographic point counts of skeletal abundance within facies and proportional facies abundance in measured sections suggest that later Cambrian successions contain on average <5% skeletal material by volume, whereas the skeletal content of post-Tremadocian Ordovician sections is closer to similar to 15%. A compilation of carbonate stratigraphic sections from across Laurentia confirms that post-Tremadocian increase in skeletal content is a general pattern and not unique to the two basins studied. The long interval (similar to 40 myr) between the initial Cambrian appearance of carbonate skeletons and the subsequent Ordovician diversification of heavily skeletonized organisms provides an important perspective on the Ordovician radiation. Geochemical data increasingly support the hypothesis that later Cambrian oceans were warm and, in subsurface water masses, commonly dysoxic to anoxic. We suggest that surface waters in such oceans would have been characterized by relatively low saturation states for calcite and aragonite. Mid-Ordovician cooling would have raised oxygen concentrations in subsurface water masses, establishing more highly oversaturated surface waters. If correct, these links could provide a proximal trigger for the renewed radiation of heavily skeletonized invertebrates and algae.
引用
收藏
页码:73 / 84
页数:12
相关论文
共 109 条
[1]   Post-Cambrian trilobite diversity and evolutionary faunas [J].
Adrain, JM ;
Fortey, RA ;
Westrop, SR .
SCIENCE, 1998, 280 (5371) :1922-1925
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1989, SPECIAL PUBLICATION, DOI DOI 10.2110/PEC.89.44.0123
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2004, GREAT ORDOVICIAN BIO
[4]  
Bengtson S., 1992, ORIGIN EARLY EVOLUTI, P447
[5]  
BERRY WBN, 1978, AM J SCI, V278, P257, DOI 10.2475/ajs.278.3.257
[6]   Unravelling causal components of the Ordovician Radiation: the Builth Inlier (central Wales) as a case study [J].
Botting, Joseph P. ;
Muir, Lucy A. .
LETHAIA, 2008, 41 (02) :111-125
[7]  
Boyer Diana L., 2003, Brigham Young University Geology Studies, V47, P1
[8]   Seawater chemistry and the advent of biocalcification [J].
Brennan, ST ;
Lowenstein, TK ;
Horita, J .
GEOLOGY, 2004, 32 (06) :473-476
[9]   Comparative sequence stratigraphy of two classic Upper Ordovician successions, Trenton Shelf (New York-Ontario) and Lexington Platform (Kentucky-Ohio): implications for eustasy and local tectonism in eastern Laurentia [J].
Brett, CE ;
McLaughlin, PI ;
Cornell, SR ;
Baird, GC .
PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 2004, 210 (2-4) :295-329
[10]  
Broecker W.S., 1982, Tracers in the sea, Palisades, V690