Intrabasinal sediment recycling from detrital strontium isotope stratigraphy

Author:

Auchter Neal C.1,Romans Brian W.1,Hubbard Stephen M.2,Daniels Benjamin G.2,Scher Howie D.3,Buckley Wayne4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geosciences, Virginia Tech, 926 West Campus Drive, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA

2. Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4, Canada

3. School of the Earth, Ocean and Environment, University of South Carolina, 701 Sumter Street, EWS 617, Columbia, South Carolina 29208, USA

4. Jacobs JETS–NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas 77058, USA

Abstract

Abstract Temporary storage of sediment between source and sink can hinder reconstruction of climate and/or tectonic signals from stratigraphy by mixing of sediment tracers with diagnostic geochemical or geochronological signatures. Constraining the occurrence and timing of intrabasinal sediment recycling has been challenging because widely used detrital geo-thermochronology applications do not record shallow burial and subsequent reworking. Here, we apply strontium isotope stratigraphy techniques to recycled marine shell material in slope deposits of the Upper Cretaceous Tres Pasos Formation, Magallanes Basin, Chile. Detrital 87Sr/86Sr ages from 94 samples show that the majority (>85%) of the shells are >1–12 m.y. older than independently constrained depositional ages. We interpret the gap between mineralization age (87Sr/86Sr age) and depositional age of host strata to represent the intrabasinal residence time of sediment storage at the million-year time scale. We also use specimen type to infer relative position of intrabasinal source material along the depositional profile, where oysters represent shallow-water (i.e., proximal) sources and inoceramids represent deeper-water (i.e., distal) sources. The combined use of detrital strontium isotope ages and specimen types from linked depositional segments provides an opportunity to identify and quantify sediment storage and recycling in ancient source-to-sink systems.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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