New Evidence for an Episode of Accelerated Environmental Change in the Late Barremian: Geochemical and Paleontological Records from the Subbetic Basin (Western Tethys
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
de Gea, Ginés A.; Castro, José Manuel; Company Sempere, Miguel; O'Dogherty, Luis; Sandoval Gabarrón, José; Quijano, María Luisa; Sequero, Cristina; Froehner, Sandro; Aguado, RoqueEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Paleoenvironments Early cretaceous Calcareous nannofossils C-isotopes Elements Biomarkers Taxy EEC
Fecha
2024-07-11Referencia bibliográfica
de Gea, G.A.; Castro, J.M.; Company, M.; O’Dogherty, L.; Sandoval, J.; Quijano, M.L.; Sequero, C.; Froehner, S.; Aguado, R. New Evidence for an Episode of Accelerated Environmental Change in the Late Barremian: Geochemical and Paleontological Records from the Subbetic Basin (Western Tethys). Geosciences 2024, 14, 187. https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences14070187
Patrocinador
Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimento y Universidades (P20_00783 Project); Research Group RNM-200 (Junta de Andalucía, Spain); Research Project FEDER- UJA 1265149 (Universidad de Jaén)Resumen
We investigate a new event of accelerated environmental change that was recorded during
the late Barremian in the pelagic Subbetic Basin (Western Tethys). Two pelagic sections have been
studied using a multi-proxy approach based on C-isotope stratigraphy and a high-resolution quantitative study of nannofossil assemblages, along with major and trace elements and biomarkers. Our
results provide a detailed biostratigraphy and C-isotope stratigraphy, and outline the paleoenvironmental conditions recorded during the early stages of the Taxy Episode. A disturbance has been
identified in the C-isotope record, called the IFeNE (Intra-Feradianus negative C-excursion), which
is coeval with environmental and biotic changes that predate the well-known ISNE (Intra-Sarasini
negative C-excursion). The combined analysis of nannofossil associations, C-isotopes, major and
trace elements, and biomarker distributions indicates a separate episode of warming heralding the
ISNE, resulting in the acceleration of the hydrological cycle and a consequent increase in continental
inputs and the fertilization of surface waters. The origin of the Taxy Episode (the IFeNE and ISNE)
has been related to orbital factors (high-eccentricity cycles), and to a global increase in volcanism,
probably related to the early phases of the Ontong Java Plateau.





