TY - JOUR
T1 - Scarcity of chert in upper Lower Triassic Panthalassic deep-sea successions of Japan records elevated clastic inputs rather than depressed biogenic silica burial flux following the end-Permian extinction
AU - Muto, Shun
AU - Takahashi, Satoshi
AU - Yamakita, Satoshi
AU - Onoue, Tetsuji
N1 - Funding Information:
We are deeply indebted to Kazuko Yoshizawa and Toshihiro Tada who aided the cleaning of the outcrops, sampling and some laboratory work. We wish to express our gratitude to Hideko Shirozu of the Fukuoka City Science Museum, Katsuhito Soda of the Kumamoto University (moved to Kochi Core Center) and the residents of Enoura for their kind support during the field investigation. We are grateful for the constructive comments of Atsushi Matsuoka, Zhong-Qiang Chen and editor Howard Falcon-Lang that greatly improved the manuscript. Ryuji Tada of the University of Tokyo is thanked for his comments on the early version of the manuscript. SM was supported by Grant-in-aid for JSPS Research Fellow Number 16J04796.
Funding Information:
We are deeply indebted to Kazuko Yoshizawa and Toshihiro Tada who aided the cleaning of the outcrops, sampling and some laboratory work. We wish to express our gratitude to Hideko Shirozu of the Fukuoka City Science Museum, Katsuhito Soda of the Kumamoto University (moved to Kochi Core Center) and the residents of Enoura for their kind support during the field investigation. We are grateful for the constructive comments of Atsushi Matsuoka, Zhong-Qiang Chen and editor Howard Falcon-Lang that greatly improved the manuscript. Ryuji Tada of the University of Tokyo is thanked for his comments on the early version of the manuscript. SM was supported by Grant-in-aid for JSPS Research Fellow Number 16J04796 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2020/12
Y1 - 2020/12
N2 - Lower Triassic sedimentary rocks deposited in pelagic regions of Panthalassa show anomalously clay-rich and silica-poor lithologies compared with the deep marine chert-dominated successions that characterise older and younger strata. The end-Permian mass extinction, which impacted radiolarians, has been proposed as an explanation for this so-called “chert gap” through its inferred impact on biogenic silica production. To test this hypothesis, we evaluated linear sedimentation rates (LSRs) for an upper Olenekian (upper Lower Triassic) siliceous claystone succession in Tsukumi, Oita Prefecture, Southwest Japan. Correlation of conodont biohorizons allows extrapolation of absolute ages obtained by previous studies in South China onto our studied sections. Results show that LSR is higher in the Lower Triassic claystone than in typical Mesozoic radiolarian bedded chert. This implies that increased burial flux of clastic material, not decreased biogenic silica burial flux, drove deposition of clay-rich sediments in pelagic Panthalassa during the late Olenekian.
AB - Lower Triassic sedimentary rocks deposited in pelagic regions of Panthalassa show anomalously clay-rich and silica-poor lithologies compared with the deep marine chert-dominated successions that characterise older and younger strata. The end-Permian mass extinction, which impacted radiolarians, has been proposed as an explanation for this so-called “chert gap” through its inferred impact on biogenic silica production. To test this hypothesis, we evaluated linear sedimentation rates (LSRs) for an upper Olenekian (upper Lower Triassic) siliceous claystone succession in Tsukumi, Oita Prefecture, Southwest Japan. Correlation of conodont biohorizons allows extrapolation of absolute ages obtained by previous studies in South China onto our studied sections. Results show that LSR is higher in the Lower Triassic claystone than in typical Mesozoic radiolarian bedded chert. This implies that increased burial flux of clastic material, not decreased biogenic silica burial flux, drove deposition of clay-rich sediments in pelagic Panthalassa during the late Olenekian.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2020.103330
DO - 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2020.103330
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85092724545
SN - 0921-8181
VL - 195
JO - Global and Planetary Change
JF - Global and Planetary Change
M1 - 103330
ER -