Jaramillo-Vogel, David et al. (2013): Neritic isotope and sedimentary records of the Eocene-Oligocene greenhouse-icehouse transition; the Calcare di Nago Formation (northern Italy) in a global context

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 119
ODP 119 744
Identifier:
2013-025137
georefid

10.1016/j.palaeo.2012.11.003
doi

Creator:
Jaramillo-Vogel, David
University of Fribourg, Department of Geosciences, Fribourg, Switzerland
author

Strasser, Andre
University of Potsdam, Institut fuer Erd- und Umweltwissenschaften, Germany
author

Frijia, Gianluca
author

Spezzaferri, Silvia
author

Identification:
Neritic isotope and sedimentary records of the Eocene-Oligocene greenhouse-icehouse transition; the Calcare di Nago Formation (northern Italy) in a global context
2013
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands
369
361-376
From the middle Eocene to early Oligocene, the Earth experienced the most significant climatic cooling of the Cenozoic era. The Eocene-Oligocene transition (EOT) represents the culmination of this climatic cooling, leading to the onset of the Antarctic glaciation and, consequently, to the beginning of the present-day icehouse world. Whereas the response of deep-sea systems to this climate transition has been widely studied, its impact on the shallow-water carbonate realm is poorly constrained. Here, the sedimentary expression of the EOT in two shallow-marine carbonate successions (Nago and San Valentino, northern Italy) belonging to the Calcare di Nago Formation is presented. The chronostratigraphic framework was constructed by integrating litho-, bio-, and isotope-stratigraphic data (C and Sr isotopes), allowing to correlate these shallow-marine successions with pelagic sections in central Italy (Massignano), Tanzania (TDP Sites 12 and 17), and the Indian Ocean (ODP Site 744). Within several sections in northern Italy, including Nago and San Valentino, a Priabonian (late Eocene) transgression is recorded. Oxygen isotopes of ODP Site 744 show a coeval negative shift of 0.4ppm, suggesting a glacio-eustatic origin for this transgression. In the Nago and San Valentino sections, no prominent sequence boundary has been detected that would indicate a rapid sea-level drop occurring together with the positive shift in delta (super 18) O defining the EOT-1 cooling event. Instead, a gradual shallowing of the depositional environment is observed. At TDP Sites 12 and 17, the EOT-1 is followed by a negative shift in delta (super 18) O of around 0.4ppm, which correlates with a relative deepening of the environment in the studied sections and suggests a melting pulse between EOT-1 and the Oligocene isotope event 1 (Oi-1). The positive delta (super 18) O shift related to the Oi-1 translates in San Valentino into a change in carbonate factory from a photozoan association dominated by larger benthic foraminifera, corals, and red algae to a heterozoan association dominated by bryozoans. The same bryozoan facies occurs in several Italian localities near the Eocene-Oligocene boundary. This facies is interpreted to represent an analogue of modern cool-water carbonates and results from a cooling pulse of at least regional scale, associated to the Oi-1 event. Abstract Copyright (2013) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:45.5000
West:10.5400East: 80.3528
South:-61.3440

Isotope geochemistry; Stratigraphy; Africa; algae; Ancona Italy; biofacies; Bivalvia; Bryozoa; C-13/C-12; Calcare di Nago Formation; carbon; carbonate rocks; Cenozoic; climate change; coastal environment; Corallinaceae; correlation; depositional environment; East Africa; environmental analysis; Eocene; Europe; fabric; Foraminifera; global; greenhouse effect; icehouse effect; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; Italy; Kerguelen Plateau; Leg 119; limestone; lithofacies; lower Oligocene; Marches Italy; marine environment; Massignano Italy; microfossils; Mollusca; northern Italy; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 744; Oligocene; Ostreidae; Ostreoidea; oxygen; paleoclimatology; Paleogene; Plantae; Priabonian; Protista; Rhodophyta; sea-level changes; sedimentary rocks; shallow-water environment; shells; Southern Europe; Southern Ocean; stable isotopes; stratigraphic boundary; subtidal environment; Tanzania; Tertiary; transgression; Trentino-Alto Adige Italy; upper Eocene; Veneto Italy;

.