Marine Strontium Isotope Evolution at the Triassic‐Jurassic Transition Links Transient Changes in Continental Weathering to Volcanism of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province

Author:

Heszler Bernát12ORCID,Katchinoff Joachim3ORCID,Palcsu László4ORCID,Horváth Anikó4ORCID,Vallner Zsolt15ORCID,Kovács Emma Blanka16ORCID,Planavsky Noah3ORCID,Pálfy József17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geology Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences Eötvös Loránd University Budapest Hungary

2. School of Earth Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

3. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Yale University New Haven CT USA

4. Isotope Climatology and Environmental Research Centre (ICER) Institute for Nuclear Research Debrecen Hungary

5. Department of Geology and Meteorology University of Pécs Pécs Hungary

6. Department of Geology and Earth Surface Research Laboratory (ESRL) Trinity College Dublin The University of Dublin College Green Dublin 2 Ireland

7. HUN‐REN‐MTM‐ELTE Research Group for Paleontology Budapest Hungary

Abstract

AbstractThe end‐Triassic extinction (ETE) is one of the most severe biotic crises in the Phanerozoic. This event was synchronous with volcanism of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP), the ultimate cause of the extinction and related environmental perturbations. However, the continental weathering response to CAMP‐induced warming remains poorly constrained. Strontium isotope stratigraphy is a powerful correlation tool that can also provide insights into the changes in weathering regime, but the scarcity of 87Sr/86Sr data across the Triassic‐Jurassic boundary (TJB) hindered the use of this method. Here we present new high‐resolution 87Sr/86Sr data from bulk carbonates at Csővár, a continuous marine section that spans 2.5 Myrs across the TJB. We document a continuing decrease in 87Sr/86Sr ratio from the late Rhaetian to the ETE, terminated by a 300 kyr interval of a flat trend and followed by a transient increase in the early Hettangian that levels off. We suggest that the first in the series of perturbations is linked to the influx of non‐radiogenic Sr from the weathering of freshly erupted CAMP basalts, leading to a delay in the radiogenic continental weathering response. The subsequent rise in 87Sr/86Sr after the TJB is explained by intensified continental crustal weathering from elevated CO2 levels and reduced mantle‐derived Sr flux. Using Sr flux modeling, we also find support for such multiphase, prolonged continental weathering scenarios. Aggregating the new data set with published records employing an astrochronological age model results in a highly resolved Sr isotope reference curve for an 8.5 Myr interval around the TJB.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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