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G7 June 29 · 15:55–16:15 · International Room III (7F)

Re-Evaluating the Stratigraphic Completeness of the Bonarelli Level (oae 2) in the Umbria–marche Basin (central Italy) Using High-Resolution Organic-Carbon Isotopes

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Gabriele Gambacorta, Jacopo Nesi, Elisabetta Erba, Hugh C. Jenkyns

Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE 2; ~94 Ma) is globally recorded by a pronounced perturbation in the carbon cycle, although its stratigraphic expression varies considerably among depositional settings. In the Umbria–Marche Basin (central Italy), OAE 2 is represented by the Bonarelli Level, a carbonate-poor interval that limits the application of carbonate-based isotopic proxies and calcareous microfossil biostratigraphy. As a result, the duration and completeness of this unit remain debated. We present a new high-resolution organic-carbon isotope (δ¹³Corg) dataset from two Bonarelli Level successions and evaluate these records through comparison with well-dated OAE 2 sections from other basins. The observed isotopic trends suggest that the characteristic OAE 2 carbon-isotope excursion is recorded in its entirety within the Bonarelli Level, despite stratigraphic condensation. This finding contrasts with earlier interpretations invoking a substantial stratigraphic gap near the top of the unit. Variations in total organic carbon (TOC) and lithofacies are synchronous across the basin, pointing to a basin-wide depositional response. These results support a revised palaeoceanographic model in which the Tethyan Umbria–Marche Basin during OAE 2 was dominated by anoxic to euxinic conditions, promoting enhanced preservation of marine organic matter and episodic reworking of biogenic silica in the form of radiolarian tests.

OAE2Cenomanian/Turonian boundarychemostratigraphyWestern Tethysbasin-scale correlation
Affiliations
  1. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy
  2. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra “A. Desio”, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
  3. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, UK