• Title of article

    Predominance of stratified anoxic Yangtze Sea interrupted by short-term oxygenation during the Ordo-Silurian transition

  • Author/Authors

    Yan، نويسنده , , Detian and Chen، نويسنده , , Daizhao and Wang، نويسنده , , Qingchen and Wang، نويسنده , , Jianguo، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    69
  • To page
    78
  • Abstract
    The Ordo-Silurian transition was a critical interval in geological history, during which profound biotic, climatic and oceanic changes occurred. In order to explore the oceanic palaeoredox changes, multiple geochemical proxies, including ratios of S/C, FeHR/FeT, FeP/FeHR and DOP values, are presented here from three sections (Wangjiawan, western Hubei, Sanjiaguan, northern Hunan, and Nanbazi, northern Guizhou) across the Ordo-Silurian boundary on the Yangtze Platform. These palaeoredox data indicate a predominance of stratified, anoxic (ferruginous) ocean on the Yangtze block during this transition, which was interrupted by a brief episode of oceanic oxygenation in the early Hirnantian. This oxygenation, temporally coinciding with the end-Ordovician glaciation and global glacio-eustatic sea level fall, likely resulted from enhanced circulation of polar cold, dense oxygen-rich water onto the low-latitude shelf. The prior and subsequent longer-term episodes of anoxic ocean, particularly the later one which started in the late Hirnantian, occurred in parallel with the rapid climatic warming and sea level rise, which could have slowed down oceanic circulation, thereby enhancing oceanic stratification, anoxia and organic preservation. Oceanic redox changes, together with rapid climatic and sea-level fluctuations, were likely responsible for the stepwise massive demise of the Ordo-Silurian biotic crisis.
  • Keywords
    Oceanic anoxia , Organic accumulation , Ordovician–Silurian transition , Yangtze Sea , Mass extinctions
  • Journal title
    Chemical Geology
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Chemical Geology
  • Record number

    2260601