4.6 Article

Photic-zone euxinia and anoxic events in a Middle-Late Devonian shelfal sea of Panthalassan continental margin, NW Canada: Changing paradigm of Devonian ocean and sea level fluctuations

Journal

GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
Volume 188, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2020.103153

Keywords

Mid-Devonian to Frasnian; Black shales; Chemostratigraphy; Anoxic events; Biomarkers; Hyalosponge spicules; Photic zone euxinia; Greenhouse ocean

Funding

  1. Geoscience for New Energy Supplies (GNES) Programme, Geological Survey of Canada (Lands and Minerals Sector, Natural Resources Canada) [20190543]

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The latest Eifelian - Frasnian strata of the Mackenzie Valley, NW Canada, provide an excellent archive of paleoceanographic signals imprinted in oxic and anoxic facies deposited in close proximity. Fondoformic black-shale strata preserve fingerprints of four global anoxic events (Kacak, Frasnes, Middlesex, and Rhinestreet), which receives confirmation with delta C-13(org) data. The discovery of 2,3,6- and 3,4,5-trimethyl aryl isoprenoids (biomarkers of green sulfur bacteria) at and between the levels of anoxic events contributes to the growing evidence of photic-zone euxinia as a common state of oceanographically open and semi-restricted shelfal basins of the Middle Devonian - Early Mississippian; a condition impossible under present-day vigorous thermohaline circulation, but consistent with models of greenhouse ocean depicting drastic slowdown in watermass turnover, reversals of deep ocean circulation, greatly expanded oxygen minimum zones, and profoundly changed nutrient flows. The rocks under study were deposited in an oceanographically open basin with fluctuating chemocline as attested by unstable presence of gammacerane in GCMS spectra and co-occurrence of signatures of water-column euxinia and pyritized hyalosponge spicules indicating episodes of weak bottom oxygenation. Shallow-water carbonate banks in the same basin show signatures of reduced hydrodynamic activity and do not record sea level changes in excess of several meters, which lines up with the shortage of evidence for high-amplitude base-level fluctuations in coeval strata worldwide. This supports discarding changes in sea level as the principal control over Devonian anoxic events and instead suggests pulsatory expansions of thick, semi-continuous oxygen minimum zones of the greenhouse ocean. Sea level fluctuations could still be involved as non-glacial (thermal and aquifer?) eustatic transgressions of a very modest amplitude.

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