Marine biodiversity through the Late Cenomanian-Early Turonian: palaeoceanographic controls and sequence stratigraphic biases

被引:169
作者
Gale, AS
Smith, AB
Monks, NEA
Young, JA
Howard, A
Wray, DS
Huggett, JM
机构
[1] Univ Greenwich, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Chatham ME4 4TB, Kent, England
[2] Nat Hist Museum, Dept Palaeontol, London SW7 5BD, England
关键词
Cretaceous; anoxia; sequence stratigraphy; diversity; palaeoenvironment;
D O I
10.1144/jgs.157.4.745
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Changes in the marine macro- and microfauna, sedimentary geochemistry and surface-water palaeoproductivity through the last 500 000 years of the Cenomanian and first 300 000 years of the Turonian are documented. These are based on the succession at Eastbourne, the thickest and most complete section through the Late Cenomanian and Early Turonian in the Anglo-Paris Basin. Two levels of rapid faunal and geochemical change are identified, one coincident with a significant increase in siliciclastic input at the base of the Plenus Marls Member, and the other with a marked drop in surface water productivity near the top of the same unit. Faunal change is demonstrated to be largely a pattern of immigration-emigration rather than true extinction, and our sequence stratigraphical analysis shows that it was coincident with major sea-lever changes. No evidence is found to support the hypothesis that reduced bottom water oxygenation developed and was responsible for extinctions amongst the benthos in mid-shelf environments. The onset of pure chalk facies is interpreted to mark the breakdown of shelf-break fronts and the spread of oligotrophic oceanic waters over much of the continental shelf, initialed by rising sea-lever. The Cenomanian-Turonian event, far from recording a mass extinction of shelf fauna, is most probably an artifact caused by a significant switch in the nature of the surviving sedimentary record as a result of a major, but perfectly ordinary, oceanographic change.
引用
收藏
页码:745 / 757
页数:13
相关论文
共 87 条
[41]   EXTINCTIONS - A PALEONTOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE [J].
JABLONSKI, D .
SCIENCE, 1991, 253 (5021) :754-757
[42]  
JALONSKI D, 1985, PHANEROZOIC DIVERSIT, P35
[43]  
JARVIS I, 1988, Cretaceous Research, V9, P3, DOI 10.1016/0195-6671(88)90003-1
[44]   THE GEOCHEMISTRY OF THE PLENUS MARLS AT DOVER, ENGLAND - EVIDENCE OF FLUCTUATING OCEANOGRAPHIC CONDITIONS AND OF GLACIAL CONTROL DURING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CENOMANIAN-TURONIAN DELTA-C-13 ANOMALY [J].
JEANS, CV ;
LONG, D ;
HALL, MA ;
BLAND, DJ ;
CORNFORD, C .
GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE, 1991, 128 (06) :603-632
[45]  
Jefieries R. P. S., 1963, Proceedings of the Geologists' Association London, V74, P1
[46]  
Jefferies R. P. S., 1962, Palaeontology, V4, P609
[47]   CRETACEOUS ANOXIC EVENTS - FROM CONTINENTS TO OCEANS [J].
JENKYNS, HC .
JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1980, 137 (MAR) :171-188
[48]   CARBON-ISOTOPE AND OXYGEN-ISOTOPE STRATIGRAPHY OF THE ENGLISH CHALK AND ITALIAN SCAGLIA AND ITS PALEOCLIMATIC SIGNIFICANCE [J].
JENKYNS, HC ;
GALE, AS ;
CORFIELD, RM .
GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE, 1994, 131 (01) :1-34
[49]  
Juignet P., 1974, THESIS U CAEN FRANCE
[50]   END-CENOMANIAN BENTHIC FORAMINIFERAL EXTINCTIONS AND OCEANIC DYSOXIC EVENTS IN THE NORTHWESTERN PACIFIC-OCEAN [J].
KAIHO, K ;
HASEGAWA, T .
PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 1994, 111 (1-2) :29-43