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Protracted oxygenation across the Cambrian–Ordovician transition: A key initiator of the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event?Fluctuations in marine oxygen concentrations have been invoked as a primary driver for changes in biodiversity throughout Earth history. Expansions in reducing marine conditions are commonly invoked as key causal mechanisms for mass extinctions, while increases in marine oxygenation are becoming an increasingly common causal mechanism invoked for biodiversification events. Here we utilize a multiproxy approach to constrain local and global marine paleoredox conditions throughout the late Cambrian–Early Ordovician from two drill core successions in Baltoscandia. Local paleoredox proxies such as manganese concentrations and iron speciation reveal that both sites in the Baltic paleobasin had persistently anoxic and predominantly euxinic (anoxic and sulfidic) bottom water conditions throughout the study interval. Corresponding trace metal datasets indicate nuanced contraction and expansion of global anoxic and euxinic conditions along continental margins during the late Cambrian–Early Ordovician. Lastly, thallium isotope data from these locally reducing sections suggest a global expansion of oxygenated shelf and deeper marine environments from the late Cambrian into the Early Ordovician. This evidence for increasingly oxic marine environments coincides with increases in burrowing depth and tiering in marine animals, as well as diversification of body fossils throughout this ~8-million-year interval. The collective geochemical datasets provide some of the first direct paleoredox evidence for an increase in marine oxygen concentrations as a key mechanism for the Ordovician radiation of marine life
Document ID
20240000843
Acquisition Source
2230 Support
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
Authors
Nevin P. Kozik ORCID
(Florida State University Tallahassee, United States)
Seth A. Young
(Florida State University Tallahassee, United States)
Anders Lindskog
(Florida State University Tallahassee, United States)
Per Ahlberg
(Lund University Lund, Sweden)
Per Ahlberg
(Florida State University Tallahassee, United States)
Date Acquired
January 19, 2024
Publication Date
May 1, 2023
Publication Information
Publication: Geobiology
Publisher: Wiley
Volume: 21
Issue: 3
Issue Publication Date: May 1, 2023
ISSN: 1472-4677
e-ISSN: 1472-4669
Subject Category
Oceanography
Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC23K0346
OTHER: DMR-1644779
OTHER: DMR-1157490
OTHER: ACS-PRF# 57487-DNI2
CONTRACT_GRANT: KR2019-0089
CONTRACT_GRANT: FG-2020–13552
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
Keywords
anoxia
biodiversity
Cambrian
molybdenum
Ordovician
vanadium
thallium isotope
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