Centennial to millennial variability of greenhouse climate across the mid-Cenomanian event

Author:

Ma Chao1,Hinnov Linda A.2,Eldrett James S.3,Meyers Stephen R.4,Bergman Steven C.3,Minisini Daniel35,Lutz Brendan3

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Sedimentary Geology, State Key Laboratory of Oil and Gas Reservoir Geology and Exploitation, Chengdu University of Technology, Chengdu 610059, China

2. Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Earth Sciences, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia 22030, USA

3. Shell International Exploration and Production, 3333 HW6 S, Houston, Texas 77082, USA

4. Department of Geoscience, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA

5. Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77005, USA

Abstract

Abstract Centennial- to millennial-scale climate variations are often attributed to solar forcing or internal climate system variability, but recognition of such variations in the deep-time paleoclimate record is extremely rare. We present an exceptionally well-preserved, millimeter-scale laminated marlstone from a succession of precession-driven limestone-marlstone couplets deposited in the Western Interior Seaway (North America) immediately preceding and during the Cretaceous mid-Cenomanian event (ca. 96.5 Ma). Sedimentological, geochemical, and micropaleontological data indicate that individual pairs of light-dark laminae record alternations in the extent of water-column mixing and oxygenation. Principal component analysis of X-ray fluorescence element counts and a grayscale scan of a continuous thin section through the marlstone reveal variations with 80–100 yr, 200–230 yr, 350–500 yr, ∼1650 yr, and 4843 yr periodicities. A substantial fraction of the data indicates an anoxic bottom water variation with a pronounced 10,784 yr cycle. The centennial to millennial variations are reminiscent of those found in Holocene total solar irradiance variability, and the 10,784 yr anoxia cycle may be a manifestation of semi-precession-influenced Tethyan oxygen minimum zone waters entering the seaway.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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