AFTERMATH OF THE END-CRETACEOUS MASS EXTINCTION - POSSIBLE BIOGEOCHEMICAL STABILIZATION OF THE CARBON-CYCLE AND CLIMATE

被引:42
作者
CALDEIRA, K
RAMPINO, MR
机构
[1] PENN STATE UNIV,CTR EARTH SYST SCI,UNIV PK,PA 16802
[2] NYU,DEPT EARTH SYST SCI,NEW YORK,NY 10003
来源
PALEOCEANOGRAPHY | 1993年 / 8卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
10.1029/93PA01163
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
In the aftermath of the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary event (approximately 65 m.y. ago), pelagic carbonate productivity was greatly reduced for several hundred thousand years. A decrease in carbonate productivity by a factor greater than 3, in the absence of some mechanism to remove excess carbonate from the ocean, should have resulted in the accumulation of carbon and alkalinity in the oceans. This would cause the atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 to fall dramatically and die deep ocean to become fully saturated with respect to calcite. Evidence of such a period of highly calcite-saturated oceans with low atmospheric pCO2 in the earliest Tertiary is lacking, suggesting that ocean chemistry may have been buffered by some process or processes. Shallow-water carbonate accumulation rates may depend, in part, on carbonate ion concentrations, and thus shallow-water carbonate deposition might act to stabilize ocean chemistry in the face of a dramatic reduction in pelagic productivity. In our four-box ocean model, as the oceanic carbonate ion concentration rises in the face of diminished pelagic carbonate accumulation, the shallow-water carbonate accumulation rate increases, compensating for the reduction in pelagic carbonate accumulation. These model results indicate that the carbonate-ion feedback on shallow-water carbonate sedimentation may have acted to balance oceanic carbon and alkalinity budgets at the K/T boundary, and, furthermore, may have been a primary mechanism maintaining high shallow-water carbonate accumulation rates prior to the Jurassic onset of widespread pelagic carbonate accumulation.
引用
收藏
页码:515 / 525
页数:11
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1982, TRACERS SEA
[2]   STABLE ISOTOPE EVIDENCE FOR GRADUAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES AND SPECIES SURVIVORSHIP ACROSS THE CRETACEOUS/TERTIARY BOUNDARY [J].
Barrera, Enriqueta ;
Keller, Gerta .
PALEOCEANOGRAPHY, 1990, 5 (06) :867-890
[3]   HISTORY OF ATMOSPHERIC CO2: CONSTRAINTS FROM THE DEEP-SEA RECORD [J].
Berger, W. H. ;
Spitzy, A. .
PALEOCEANOGRAPHY, 1988, 3 (04) :401-411
[4]   THE CARBONATE-SILICATE GEOCHEMICAL CYCLE AND ITS EFFECT ON ATMOSPHERIC CARBON-DIOXIDE OVER THE PAST 100 MILLION YEARS [J].
BERNER, RA ;
LASAGA, AC ;
GARRELS, RM .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, 1983, 283 (07) :641-683
[5]   ATMOSPHERIC CARBON-DIOXIDE LEVELS OVER PHANEROZOIC TIME [J].
BERNER, RA .
SCIENCE, 1990, 249 (4975) :1382-1386
[6]   PLANKTOGENIC EUSTATIC CONTROL ON CRATONIC OCEANIC CARBONATE ACCUMULATION [J].
BOSS, SK ;
WILKINSON, BH .
JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY, 1991, 99 (04) :497-513
[7]   WARM SALINE BOTTOM WATER IN THE ANCIENT OCEAN [J].
BRASS, GW ;
SOUTHAM, JR ;
PETERSON, WH .
NATURE, 1982, 296 (5858) :620-623
[8]  
BURTON EA, 1987, GEOLOGY, V15, P111, DOI 10.1130/0091-7613(1987)15<111:RPROAA>2.0.CO
[9]  
2
[10]  
CALDEIRA K, 1990, GLOBAL BIOEVENTS ABR, P333