Nannoplankton Response Indicates Intra-Oae2 Cooling (plenus Cold Event) in Southeastern Tethys (qiangdong, Tibet)
G13 Understanding Mass Extinctions and Environmental Changes through Geological Time: Causes and Effects 📅 Add to Calendar✉ Corresponding: Xi Chen
The Cretaceous Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE2, ~93.9 Ma) was a period of rapid global environmental change and one of the warmest intervals in the Phanerozoic. Despite its global significance, we still know little about the effects of this greenhouse event from the shallow marine shelf environments of the Southern Hemisphere. Here, we present a paleoenvironmental reconstruction from the eastern Tethys Ocean based on calcareous nannofossil paleoecological records from an OAE2 section (Qiangdong) in southern Tibet. Our nannofossil temperature index indicates onset of warming ca. 75 kyrs before the OAE2, peaking in the early OAE, but followed soon (~60 kyr after the OAE onset) by a phase of climatic instability. This cool interval correlates well with the Plenus Cold Event (PCE), previously documented in the Northern Hemisphere (e.g., western Europe). The PCE cooling is followed by further warming in the later OAE, continuing into the post-OAE2 early Turonian interval consistent with peak warmth of the Cretaceous thermal maximum (KTM). A calcareous nannofossil productivity index reveals dynamic surface water productivity trends with maximum values during the PCE cool interval indicating that sequestration of CO2 through elevated marine primary productivity was likely an important feedback during this carbon cycle perturbation event.
Affiliations
- Frontiers Science Center for Deep-time Digital Earth, State Key Laboratory of
- Geomicrobiology and Environmental Changes, China University of Geosciences, Beijing
- 100083, China
- School of Earth Sciences and Resources, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083,
- China
- Institute of Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China
- Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, London WCE 6BT, United Kingdom
- School of Earth Sciences, Hebei GEO University, Shijiazhuang 050031, China
- Department of Earth Sciences, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan 20133, Italy
- *Corresponding author. Email:
- xichen@cugb.edu.cn