STABLE-ISOTOPE STRATIGRAPHY AND PALEOCLIMATOLOGY OF THE PALEOGENE BIGHORN BASIN (WYOMING, USA)

被引:217
作者
KOCH, PL
ZACHOS, JC
DETTMAN, DL
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF SANTA CRUZ,EARTH SCI BOARD,SANTA CRUZ,CA 95064
[2] UNIV MICHIGAN,DEPT GEOL SCI,ANN ARBOR,MI 48109
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0031-0182(94)00107-J
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Climatic warming from the late Paleocene into the early Eocene had profound effects on atmospheric and marine circulation, marine thermal gradients, and benthic biota. In addition, marine carbon isotope values decreased substantially in both surface and deep waters. Because carbon is rapidly exchanged between reservoirs at the earth's surface, such as marine surface water, the atmosphere, land plants, and materials that obtain carbon from plants; (e.g., soil minerals and herbivores), carbon isotope fluctuations provide time lines linking the marine and continental records. We analyzed the carbon isotope composition of paleosol carbonates and mammalian tooth enamel from stratigraphic sections in northwestern Wyoming. Carbon isotope correlation demonstrates that a short interval of extreme high-latitude warming coincided precisely with the first appearance of several important modern mammalian orders. In addition, oxygen isotope analyses of fossils and paleosol carbonates provide information about climatic conditions on land in the Paleogene. We reconstructed the oxygen isotope composition of local meteoric water using biogenic minerals. Paleocene-Eocene meteoric water was significantly O-18-depleted, indicating substantial loss of water vapor during its transport to the region. Soil temperature was calculated as a proxy for mean annual temperature, assuming oxygen isotope equilibrium between soil carbonate and meteoric water. Calculated temperatures were plausible (approximate to 10-25 degrees C), but highly variable, prohibiting high-resolution analysis of local temperature variations in response to global climatic warming.
引用
收藏
页码:61 / 89
页数:29
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