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Pulses of enhanced continental weathering associated with multiple Late Devonian climate perturbations: Evidence from osmium-isotope compositions

  • L.M.E. Percival
  • , D. Selby
  • , D.P.G. Bond
  • , M. Rakociński
  • , G. Racki
  • , L. Marynowski
  • , T. Adatte
  • , J.E. Spangenberg
  • , K.B. Föllmi

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Anomalously high rates of continental weathering have frequently been proposed as a key stimulus for the development of widespread marine anoxia during a number of Late Devonian environmental and biospheric crises, which included a major mass extinction during the Frasnian–Famennian transition (marked by the Upper and Lower Kellwasser horizons). Here, this model is investigated by presenting the first stratigraphic record of osmium-isotope trends ( 187 Os/ 188 Os) in upper Devonian strata from the Kowala Quarry (Holy Cross Mountains, Poland). Changes in reconstructed 187 Os/ 188 Os seawater values to more radiogenic compositions are documented at the base of both the Lower (~0.42 to ~0.83) and Upper (~0.31 to ~0.81) Kellwasser horizons characteristic of the Frasnian–Famennian transition, and additionally within upper Famennian shales that record a more minor environmental perturbation known as the Annulata Event (~0.20 to ~0.53). These shifts indicate the occurrence of extremely enhanced continental weathering rates at the onsets of the Kellwasser crises and during the later Annulata Event. The similarity of 187 Os/ 188 Os values in this study from Frasnian–Famennian boundary and lower Famennian strata (between 0.4 and 0.5) to those from North American stratigraphic equivalents suggests that the 187 Os/ 188 Os values record global trends. These findings support a causal relationship between increased continental weathering (and thus, nutrient supply to the marine shelf) and the environmental perturbations that occurred during numerous Late Devonian events, including both of the biospherically catastrophic Kellwasser crises as well as other, less severe, oceanic anoxic events.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)240-249
JournalPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Volume524
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jun 2019
Externally publishedYes

Funding

We thank Thomas Algeo, Sandra Kaiser, and one anonymous reviewer for their constructive feedback which has allowed important improvements to be made to this manuscript. We greatly appreciate the laboratory assistance given by Jean-Claude Lavanchy, Alexey Ulyanov, Geoff Nowell, Chris Ottley, Nicholas Saintilan, Antonia Hofmann, and Zeyang Liu, and also thank Agnieszka Pisarzowska and Ronnie Guthrie for help collecting geological samples in the field. We gratefully acknowledge the TOTAL Endowment Fund and the Dida Scholarship from CUG Wuhan (D.S.), the National Science Centre, Poland (MAESTRO grant 2013/08/A/ST10/00717 to G.R. M.R. and L.M.), the Natural Environment Research Council (grant number NE/J01799X/1 to D.P.G.B.), and the University of Lausanne (L.M.E.P.) for funding. We thank Thomas Algeo, Sandra Kaiser, and one anonymous reviewer for their constructive feedback which has allowed important improvements to be made to this manuscript. We greatly appreciate the laboratory assistance given by Jean-Claude Lavanchy, Alexey Ulyanov, Geoff Nowell, Chris Ottley, Nicholas Saintilan, Antonia Hofmann, and Zeyang Liu, and also thank Agnieszka Pisarzowska and Ronnie Guthrie for help collecting geological samples in the field. We gratefully acknowledge the TOTAL Endowment Fund and the Dida Scholarship from CUG Wuhan (D.S.), the National Science Centre, Poland (MAESTRO grant 2013/08/A/ST10/00717 to G.R., M.R., and L.M.), the Natural Environment Research Council (grant number NE/J01799X/1 to D.P.G.B.), and the University of Lausanne (L.M.E.P.) for funding.

FundersFunder number
Université de Lausanne
China University of Geosciences, Wuhan
CUG Wuhan
Narodowym Centrum Nauki
TOTAL Endowment Fund
UK Research and Innovation
Natural Environment Research CouncilNE/J01799X/1
Narodowe Centrum Nauki2013/08/A/ST10/00717

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