TY - JOUR
T1 - The Calcium Isotope (δ44/40Ca) Record Through Environmental Changes
T2 - Insights From the Late Triassic
AU - Kovács, Zsófia
AU - Demangel, Isaline
AU - Baldermann, Andre
AU - Hippler, Dorothee
AU - Schmitt, Anne Désirée
AU - Gangloff, Sophie
AU - Krystyn, Leopold
AU - Richoz, Sylvain
N1 - Funding Information:
The Austrian Science Fund (FWF) (Project Number: P 29497‐P29 to Sylvain Richoz) and the Royal Physiographic Society of Lund (grant to Isaline Demangel and Zsófia Kovács) is acknowledged for financial support of this research. We acknowledge the assistance of Colin Fourtet during the ICP‐AES measurements. We thank Bruno Galbrun, Silvia Gardin and Annachiara Bartolini for their help during the sampling at Zlambach. We gratefully acknowledge the technical of Franz Tscherne during material preparation. We thank E. M. Griffith and an anonymous reviewer for their very constructive comments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022. The Authors.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Calcium isotopes (δ44/40Ca) are particularly useful in palaeo-environmental studies due to the key role of carbonate minerals in continental weathering and their formation in seawater. The calcium isotope ratio can provide hints on past changes in the calcium fluxes, environmental shifts, ecological factors and alternatively diagenesis of carbonate rocks. The investigation of the Late Triassic calcium isotope record offers a great opportunity to evaluate such factors in a time interval that witnessed important environmental and ecological turnovers, such as the first appearance of calcareous nannoplankton, ocean acidification and periods of elevated extinction rates. In this study, we present a δ44/40Ca data set from the upper Norian (Upper Triassic) through the lower Hettangian (Lower Jurassic) interval. The isotope records reveal two globally significant signals: a ∼ 0.20‰ decrease through the early Rhaetian (Upper Triassic) and a small, negative (∼0.14‰) excursion corresponding to the emplacement of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province, at the end of the Triassic. The possible explanations for these signals are changes in the isotopic ratio of the continental calcium influx to the ocean due to the high chemical weathering rate of carbonates and possibly ocean acidification, respectively. The considerable (∼0.15–0.30‰) offset in δ44/40Ca between study areas is likely the combined result of local differences in lithology and early marine diagenesis. The major evolutionary step represented by the first occurrence of calcareous nannoplankton did not have at this time a determining role on the calcium isotopic signature of the marine carbonates.
AB - Calcium isotopes (δ44/40Ca) are particularly useful in palaeo-environmental studies due to the key role of carbonate minerals in continental weathering and their formation in seawater. The calcium isotope ratio can provide hints on past changes in the calcium fluxes, environmental shifts, ecological factors and alternatively diagenesis of carbonate rocks. The investigation of the Late Triassic calcium isotope record offers a great opportunity to evaluate such factors in a time interval that witnessed important environmental and ecological turnovers, such as the first appearance of calcareous nannoplankton, ocean acidification and periods of elevated extinction rates. In this study, we present a δ44/40Ca data set from the upper Norian (Upper Triassic) through the lower Hettangian (Lower Jurassic) interval. The isotope records reveal two globally significant signals: a ∼ 0.20‰ decrease through the early Rhaetian (Upper Triassic) and a small, negative (∼0.14‰) excursion corresponding to the emplacement of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province, at the end of the Triassic. The possible explanations for these signals are changes in the isotopic ratio of the continental calcium influx to the ocean due to the high chemical weathering rate of carbonates and possibly ocean acidification, respectively. The considerable (∼0.15–0.30‰) offset in δ44/40Ca between study areas is likely the combined result of local differences in lithology and early marine diagenesis. The major evolutionary step represented by the first occurrence of calcareous nannoplankton did not have at this time a determining role on the calcium isotopic signature of the marine carbonates.
KW - carbonates
KW - end-Triassic mas extinction
KW - isotope proxy
KW - nannofossils
KW - Rhaetian
KW - Triassic/Jurassic boundary
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85145020719&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1029/2022GC010405
DO - 10.1029/2022GC010405
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85145020719
VL - 23
JO - Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
JF - Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
SN - 1525-2027
IS - 12
M1 - e2022GC010405
ER -