Clark, Kendra R. et al. (2010): The mid-Maastrichtian event on Shatsky Rise, ODP Leg 198

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 198
ODP 198 1209
ODP 198 1210
Identifier:
2011-086969
georefid

Creator:
Clark, Kendra R.
University of Massachusetts, Department of Geosciences, Amherst, MA, United States
author

Leckie, R. Mark
University of Nebraska, United States
author

Burns, Stephen J.
author

Dameron, Serena
author

Frank, Tracy D.
author

Identification:
The mid-Maastrichtian event on Shatsky Rise, ODP Leg 198
2010
In: Anonymous, Geological Society of America, 2010 annual meeting
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
42
5
298
ODP tropical Pacific sites 1209 and 1210 provide an unusual record of the mid-Maastrichtian Event (MME). Clusters of large Inoceramus prisms are restricted to several meters of section before abruptly disappearing. The significance of the short range of inoceramid bivalves over the shallowest sites of Shatsky Rise is currently not understood. New isotopic and benthic foraminiferal population data from these sites may provide a possible explanation to the limited stratigraphic range of inoceramids on Shatsky Rise. We suggest that this was a regional expression of a diachronous event. This study shows the MME is indicated in surface-dwelling planktic foraminifera by a 0.50ppm positive shift in delta (super 18) O values ( approximately 2 degrees C cooling) and a 0.24ppm negative shift in delta (super 13) C values occurring at approximately 69.3 Ma. This is coincident with the FO of inoceramids and changes in benthic foraminiferal populations. This cooling event is in contrast to a previous study of these sites by Frank et al. (2005; Paleoceanography) which showed a negative shift in surface delta (super 18) O values at the MME. Increased seasonality could account for differences in surface temperatures as recorded by two different species P. costulata (this study) and R. rugosa (Frank et al.) and may indicate a preference for cooler water and warmer water, respectively. Simultaneous is a collapse of both the delta (super 18) O and delta (super 13) C gradient between surface (P. costulata) and thermocline (G. stuartiformis) dwellers. The collapse of the surface delta (super 13) C gradient records higher productivity due to the upwelling of cooler, nutrient-rich ( (super 12) C-rich) waters. There are no significant shifts in the delta (super 18) O and delta (super 13) C values of planktic foraminifera at the time inoceramids abruptly disappear from the record at Shatsky Rise. After this time the delta (super 13) C and delta (super 18) O gradient in the surface waters stayed high but variable before a sudden warming event in the planktic record at 68.7 Ma a date which is in good agreement for the global extinction of inoceramid bivalves in the North Pacific (Nifuku et al., 2009; Palaeo3). This supports our hypothesis that the short range of inoceramid bivalves at Shatsky Rise was a regional event brought on by changes in surface productivity and greater flux of food out of the surface waters, or by a change in deep waters.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:32.4000
West:158.1600East: 158.3100
South:32.1300

Stratigraphy; Bivalvia; C-13/C-12; carbon; Cretaceous; extinction; Foraminifera; Inocerami; Inoceramidae; Inoceramus; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 198; Maestrichtian; Mesozoic; microfossils; middle Maestrichtian; Mollusca; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; nutrients; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1209; ODP Site 1210; oxygen; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; planktonic taxa; productivity; Protista; Pteriina; Pterioida; Senonian; Shatsky Rise; stable isotopes; thermocline; Upper Cretaceous; upwelling; West Pacific;

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