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Enhanced continental weathering and large igneous province induced climate warming at the Permo-Carboniferous transition.

Authors :
Yang, Jianghai
Cawood, Peter A.
Montañez, Isabel P.
Condon, Daniel J.
Du, Yuansheng
Yan, Jia-Xin
Yan, Shaoquan
Yuan, Dongxun
Source :
Earth & Planetary Science Letters. Mar2020, Vol. 534, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• Three tuffaceous layers from North China are dated by CA-TIMS method. • Permo-Carboniferous weathering trends are reconstructed for the southern North China. • A rapid climate warming is documented at the Permo-Carboniferous transition. • The climate fluctuation is causally linked to the Skagerrak-Centered large igneous province. Tracking climate change and its relationships with chemical weathering and massive volcanic activity in deep-time greatly improves our understanding of the Earth's climate system. The Permo-Carboniferous period is a critical time interval with million year-scale glacial-deglacial cycles and massive basaltic volcanism, such as the Skagerrak-Centered (also named Skagerrak or Jutland) large igneous province. To explore the volcanism-climate interactions in this period, we obtained high precision CA-TIMS U-Pb zircon ages for three tuffaceous layers from a cored upper Pennsylvanian-lower Permian marginal marine succession in southern North China. These ages calibrate the Permo-Carboniferous biostratigraphy between ∼301–296 Ma in North China. From this dated core succession, mudrock samples and their calculated weathering index values were screened to constrain the weathering trends for the source landscapes and demonstrate a rapid increase with a subsequent decrease in source chemical weathering intensity during the period of ∼299 to 296.5 Ma. These trends coincide with the southern Gondwana glacial records, low latitude temperature changes, relative sea-level variations, and shifts in atmospheric p CO 2 that together document an earliest Permian climate warming-cooling perturbation with a temperature maximum at ∼298 Ma. This climate warming in the Permo-Carboniferous icehouse correlates with the emplacement of the Skagerrak-Centered large igneous province, which likely released voluminous CO 2 that led to climate warming during the Permo-Carboniferous transition. The immediately following cooling could possibly result from the rapid post-eruptional weathering of the massive basaltic rocks of this province in tropical latitudes, which would have sequestered atmospheric CO 2 and promoted return to cooler icehouse conditions. This study supports the assertation that massive basaltic volcanism could first cause rapid climate warming and then may have an overall net cooling effect as previously suggested for the Deccan Traps and the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0012821X
Volume :
534
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Earth & Planetary Science Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141939383
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116074