Journal
PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH
Volume 332, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.precamres.2019.105387
Keywords
Neoproterozoic; Carbon isotopes; Carbonates; Stratigraphy
Categories
Funding
- NSERC
- McGill University Graduate Mobility Award
- Harvard University
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The Islay carbon isotope anomaly is a late Tonian negative delta C-13 excursion that has been documented in marine carbonates globally. It has in the past been thought to be causally linked to the onset of Cryogenian glaciation ca. 717 Ma. However, recent work suggests that this anomaly is instead closer to ca. 739-735 Ma and that it may be one of two distinct late Tonian carbon isotope anomalies. Here we present the litho- and chemo-stratigraphy of the late Tonian Ugab Subgroup of the Otavi/Swakop Group in northwestern Namibia. Carbon isotope data from two separate outcrop belts, the Summas Mountains and the Vrede Domes, indicate that the Ugab Subgroup strata exposed in the former inlier are older than those of the latter, with only approximately 100 m of stratigraphic overlap. We use detailed measured sections to develop a sequence stratigraphic framework for the Ugab Subgroup in each outcrop belt, and correlate strata across the two exposures to construct a composite carbonate delta C-13 record for the late Tonian in Namibia. This carbon isotope profile of the Ugab Subgroup shows two separate pre-Sturtian negative anomalies, consistent with findings in northern Canada, Svalbard, Scotland, and Ethiopia. Our results are an important contribution to the pre-Cryogenian carbon isotope record, as these data may serve as the first definitive documentation of both anomalies within a single basin.
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