Robinson, Stuart A. (2011): Shallow-water carbonate record of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum from a Pacific Ocean guyot

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 144
ODP 144 871
Identifier:
2011-012669
georefid

10.1130/G31422.1
doi

Creator:
Robinson, Stuart A.
University College London, Department of Earth Sciences, London, United Kingdom
author

Identification:
Shallow-water carbonate record of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum from a Pacific Ocean guyot
2011
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
39
1
51-54
The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM; ca. 55.8 Ma) is associated with a rapid and large carbon cycle perturbation, transient warming, and deep-sea acidification. Although this event is widely known from pelagic, hemipelagic, and continental records, the lack of in situ, shallow-water carbonate platform sections inhibits interpretations of whether the PETM had a significant effect on shallow-water carbonate ecosystems. Limalok Guyot (Ocean Drilling Program Site 871) in the Pacific Ocean comprises a volcanic pedestal topped by a Paleogene carbonate platform that drowned in the Middle Eocene. Carbon isotope stratigraphy of the platform carbonate sediments is used, in conjunction with existing biostratigraphy, to refine the stratigraphic framework of the carbonate platform. Although core recovery was poor, the major Late Paleocene-Middle Eocene stratigraphic trends in carbon isotopes are recognized, including a prominent approximately 3 per mil negative carbon isotope excursion, recording the onset of the PETM. The lithological and paleontological record of the PETM on Limalok Guyot shows no major evidence for a carbonate production crisis, suggesting that the effects of any changes in temperatures or surface ocean pH were relatively short lived or relatively minor.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:5.3326
West:172.2040East: 172.2040
South:5.3326

Stratigraphy; benthic taxa; biostratigraphy; burial diagenesis; C-13/C-12; carbon; carbonate rocks; Cenozoic; chemostratigraphy; diagenesis; Foraminifera; geochemistry; grainstone; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 144; Limalok Seamount; marine environment; microfossils; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Nummulites; Nummulitidae; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; ODP Site 871; Pacific Ocean; packstone; paleo-oceanography; Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum; paleoclimatology; Paleogene; paleotemperature; Protista; Rotaliacea; Rotaliina; seamounts; sedimentary rocks; shallow-water environment; stable isotopes; Tertiary; West Pacific;

.