
The spread of marine anoxia on the northern Tethys margin during the Paleocene‐Eocene Thermal Maximum
Author(s) -
Dickson Alexander J.,
ReesOwen Rhian L.,
März Christian,
Coe Angela L.,
Cohen Anthony S.,
Pancost Richard D.,
Taylor Kyle,
Shcherbinina Ekaterina
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1002/2014pa002629
Subject(s) - anoxic waters , geology , water column , total organic carbon , seawater , oceanography , seafloor spreading , sedimentary rock , organic matter , carbon cycle , bottom water , sediment , geochemistry , earth science , paleontology , environmental chemistry , ecosystem , ecology , chemistry , biology
Records of the paleoenvironmental changes that occurred during the Paleocene‐Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) are preserved in sedimentary rocks along the margins of the former Tethys Ocean and Peri‐Tethys. This paper presents new geochemical data that constrain paleoproductivity, sediment delivery, and seawater redox conditions, from three sites that were located in the Peri‐Tethys region. Trace and major element, iron speciation, and biomarker data indicate that water column anoxia was established during episodes when inputs of land‐derived higher plant organic carbon and highly weathered detrital clays and silts became relatively higher. Anoxic conditions are likely to have been initially caused by two primary processes: (i) oxygen consumption by high rates of marine productivity, initially stimulated by the rapid delivery of terrestrially derived organic matter and nutrients, and (ii) phosphorus regeneration from seafloor sediments. The role of the latter process requires further investigation before its influence on the spread of deoxygenated seawater during the PETM can be properly discerned. Other oxygen‐forcing processes, such as temperature/salinity‐driven water column stratification and/or methane oxidation, are considered to have been relatively less important in the study region. Organic carbon enrichments occur only during the initial stages of the PETM as defined by the negative carbon isotope excursions at each site. The lack of observed terminal stage organic carbon enrichment does not support a link between PETM climate recovery and the sequestration of excess atmospheric CO 2 as organic carbon in this region; such a feedback may, however, have been important in the early stages of the PETM.