Geochemical and Hydrographic Evolution of the Late Devonian Appalachian Seaway: Linking Sedimentation, Redox, and Salinity Across Time and Space

Author:

Gilleaudeau Geoffrey J.1ORCID,Wei Wei2ORCID,Remírez Mariano N.1,Song Yi3,Lyons Timothy W.4,Bates Steven45,Anbar Ariel D.67,Algeo Thomas J.289

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Earth Sciences George Mason University VA Fairfax USA

2. State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources China University of Geosciences Wuhan China

3. School of Marine Sciences Guangxi University Nanning China

4. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of California CA Riverside USA

5. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center MD Greenbelt USA

6. School of Earth and Space Exploration Arizona State University AZ Tempe USA

7. School of Molecular Sciences Arizona State University AZ Tempe USA

8. Department of Geosciences University of Cincinnati OH Cincinnati USA

9. State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology China University of Geosciences Wuhan China

Abstract

AbstractContinental interiors were flooded by epeiric seas during many intervals of the geologic past. Few modern analogs exist for these environments, however, and basic variables such as redox, salinity, and restriction are difficult to reconstruct in deep time. Despite these challenges, constraining epeiric watermass properties is critical because much of our preserved and accessible sedimentary record was deposited in such settings. Here, we present a four‐dimensional reconstruction of watermass evolution in the Late Devonian Appalachian Seaway of North America. We use combined proxies for sediment supply, paleosalinity, paleoredox, and basin hydrography in six cores through the Upper Devonian Cleveland Shale deposited across a paleo‐depth transect. Cyclic, coupled changes in sedimentation, redox, and salinity are recorded in environments near the Catskill Delta. Additionally, a pronounced salinity gradient was present from low‐brackish conditions near the delta to fully marine conditions in the basin interior, with a lower‐salinity mixing zone recorded across the Cumberland Sill. We also identified two broad sequences—the lower and upper Cleveland Shale—each of which shows distinct watermass signatures. The lower Cleveland Shale records a redox gradient with euxinia only present along the Cumberland Sill, whereas the upper Cleveland Shale records intensification of euxinia (potentially in the photic zone) at all six sites, which may be coincident with the Hangenberg extinction event. Ultimately, this study identifies pronounced epeiric watermass gradients over short timescales (millennia) and distances (hundreds of km or less), highlighting the need for interpreting the geochemistry of epicontinental deposits in the context of basin hydrography and paleosalinity.

Funder

American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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