Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Is Mercury a Signal for Mass Vulcanism Across the KT/K=Pg Boundary?


Mercury as a proxy for volcanic activity during extreme environmental turnover: The Cretaceous-Paleogene transition

Authors:

1. A.N. Sial (a)
2. L.D. Lacerda (b)
3. V.P. Ferreira (a)
4. R. Frei (c)
5. R.A. Marquillas (d)
6. J.A. Barbosa (e)
7. C. Gaucher (f)
8, C.C. Windmöller (g)
9, N.S. Pereira (a)

Affiliations:

a. NEG-LABISE, Department of Geology, Federal University of Pernambuco, Recife, PE, 50740-530, Brazil

b. LABOMAR, Institute of Marine Sciences, Federal University of Ceará, Fortaleza, 60165-081, Brazil

c. Institute of Geography and Geology, University of Copenhagen, Oster Volgade 10, Copenhagen, Denmark, 1350

d. Universidad de Salta, Salta, Argentina CONICET, Buenos Aires 177, 4400 Salta, Argentina

e. LAGESE, Department Geology, Federal University of Pernambuco, Recife, 50740-530, Brazil

f. Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de La Republica, Montevideo, Uruguay

g. Department of Chemistry, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Av. Antônio Carlos 6627, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, 31270-901, Brazil

Abstract:

The usually low geological background concentrations of Hg makes this trace element suitable for identifying accumulation pulses in sediments that can be tentatively related to weathering processes and thus to climatic changes. Intense volcanism has witnessed the Cretaceous‒Paleogene transition (KTB) and was, perhaps, responsible for dramatic climatic changes and decrease in biodiversity and mass extinction. We have used Hg concentrations as a proxy for volcanic activity and atmospheric Hg and CO2 buildup across the KTB at three localities. In the Salta Basin, Argentina, Hg contents display several spikes across the KTB, with a maximum value of 250 ng.g− 1. In three drill cores across the KTB in the Paraíba Basin, northeastern Brazil, Hg contents increase from the late Maastrichtian to early Danian and Hg spikes predate the KTB, perhaps, as a record of volcanic activity before (but very close to) this transition. At Stevns Klint, Denmark, Hg contents reached almost 250 ng.g− 1 within a 5 cm thick-clay layer, the Fiskeler Member (‘Fish Clay’) that comprises the KTB. Some co-variation between Hg and Al2O3 contents has been observed in all of the studied sections across the KTB, suggesting that Hg is probably adsorbed onto clays. Thermo-desorption experiments in selected samples from the Yacoraite Formation showed Hg+ 2 as the major species present, which is in agreement with a volcanic origin. Combined Hg and C-isotope chemostratigraphy may become a powerful tool for the eventual assessment of the role of volcanic activity during extreme climatic and biotic events, such as those during the KTB.

No comments: