Near Coincidence of Maximum Deccan Volcanism with the Cretaceous-Paleogene Boundary Revealed by Mercury Anomalies
Publication Year
2017
Type
Conference Paper
Abstract
Mercury is a very toxic element, with a long residence time (1-2 years) and wide distribution by aerosols. Several studies evaluated the relationship between Hg anomalies in sediments and LIP activity across mass extinction horizons. The bulk (80%) of Deccan Trap eruptions occurred over a relatively short time interval in magnetic polarity C29r. U-Pb zircon geochronology reveals the onset of this main eruption phase 250 ky before the Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) mass extinction and continued into the early Danian suggesting a cause-and-effect relationship. We investigate the mercury (Hg) contents of sections in France (Bidart), Spain (Zumaya), Denmark (Nye Klov), Austria (Gams), Italy (Gubbio), Tunisia (Elles, El Kef), Egypt (Wadi Nukhul, Sinai, Duwi, Eastern Desert), Israel (Negev), India (Megalaya), Texas USA (Brazos River) and NE Mexico (El Penon, La Parida). In all sections, results show Hg concentrations are more than 2 orders of magnitude greater during the last 100ky of the Maastrichtian up to the early Danian P1a zone (first 380 Ky of the Paleocene). These Hg anomalies are correlative with the main Deccan eruption phase. Hg anomalies generally show no correlation with clay or total organic carbon contents, suggesting that the mercury enrichments resulted from higher input of atmospheric Hg species into the marine realm, rather than organic matter scavenging and/or increased run-off. At Gams, Bidart and Elles, Hg anomalies correlate with high shell fragmentation and dissolution effects in planktic foraminifera indicating that paleoenvironmental and paleoclimate changes drastically affected marine biodiversity. Hg isotope data from Bidart support a direct fallout from volcanic aerosols. PGEs data from Mishor Rotem (Israel) from the KPg layer and two uppermost Maastritchian red clay layers provide some important clues about the Hg deposited in the KPg layer, which appears to be more linked to volcanism than impact, suggesting a major pulse of Deccan activity just before and at the KPg.
These observations provide further support that Deccan volcanism played a key role in increasing atmospheric CO2 and SO2 levels that resulted in global warming and acidified oceans, increasing biotic stress that predisposed faunas to eventual extinction at the KPg.
Conference Name
Geological Society of America Annual Meeting
Date Published
10/2017
Publisher
Geological Society of America
Conference Location
Seattle, Washington
Other Numbers
Session No. 197-2, Abstract #302876