Hardground, gap and thin black shale: spatial heterogeneity of arrested carbonate sedimentation during the Jenkyns Event (T-OAE) in a Tethyan pelagic Basin (Gerecse Mts, Hungary)

Author:

Müller Tamás12ORCID,Price Gregory D.3ORCID,Mattioli Emanuela45ORCID,Leskó Máté Zs.6ORCID,Kristály Ferenc6ORCID,Pálfy József27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Isotope Climatology and Environmental Research Centre, Institute for Nuclear Research, Bem tér 18/C, H-4026, Debrecen, Hungary

2. Department of Geology, Eötvös Loránd University, Pázmány Péter sétány 1/C, Budapest H-1117, Hungary

3. School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Plymouth University, Drake Circus, Plymouth, PL4 8AA, UK

4. Univ Lyon1, ENSL, CNRS, LGL-TPE, F-69622, Villeurbanne, France

5. Institut Universitaire de France, Paris, France

6. Institute of Mineralogy and Geology, University of Miskolc, HU-3515 Miskolc-Egyetemváros, Miskolc, Hungary

7. MTA-MTM-ELTE Research Group for Paleontology, POB 137, H-1431, Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

AbstractThe Jenkyns Event or Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event was an episode of severe environmental perturbations reflected in carbon isotope and other geochemical anomalies. Although well studied in the epicontinental basins in NW Europe, its effects are less understood in open marine environments. Here we present new geochemical (carbon isotope, CaCO3, [Mn]) and nannofossil biostratigraphic data from the Tölgyhát and Kisgerecse sections in the Gerecse Hills (Hungary). These sections record pelagic carbonate sedimentation near the margin of the Tethys Ocean. A negative carbon isotope excursion of c. 6‰ is observed in the Tölgyhát section, in a condensed clay and black shale layer where the CaCO3 content drops in association with the Jenkyns Event. At Kisgerecse, bio- and chemostratigraphic data suggest a gap in the lower Toarcian. The presence of an uppermost Pliensbachian hardground, the absence of the lowermost Toarcian Tenuicostatum ammonite zone and the condensed record of the Jenkyns Event at Tölgyhát, together with a condensed Tenuicostatum Zone and the missing negative carbon isotope anomaly at Kisgerecse, imply arrested carbonate sedimentation. A calcification crisis and sea-level rise together led to a decrease in carbonate production and terrigenous input, suggesting that volcanogenic CO2-driven global warming may have been their common cause.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

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