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Published July 2, 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Carbonate uranium isotopes record global expansion of marine anoxia during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event

Abstract

The Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE; ~183 Mya) was a globally significant carbon-cycle perturbation linked to widespread deposition of organic-rich sediments, massive volcanic CO2 release, marine faunal extinction, sea-level rise, a crisis in carbonate production related to ocean acidification, and elevated seawater temperatures. Despite recognition of the T-OAE as a potential analog for future ocean deoxygenation, current knowledge on the severity of global ocean anoxia is limited largely to studies of the trace element and isotopic composition of black shales, which are commonly affected by local processes. Here, we present the first carbonate-based uranium isotope (δ238U) record of the T-OAE from open marine platform limestones of the southeastern Tethys Ocean as a proxy for global seawater redox conditions. A significant negative δ238U excursion (~0.4‰) is recorded just prior to the onset of the negative carbon isotope excursion comprised within the T-OAE, followed by a long-lived recovery of δ238U values, thus confirming that the T-OAE represents a global expansion of marine anoxia. Using a Bayesian inverse isotopic mass balance model, we estimate that anoxic waters covered ~6 to 8% of the global seafloor during the peak of the T-OAE, which represents 28 to 38 times the extent of anoxia in the modern ocean. These data, combined with δ238U-based estimates of seafloor anoxic area for other CO2-driven Phanerozoic OAEs, suggest a common response of ocean anoxia to carbon release, thus improving prediction of future anthropogenically induced ocean deoxygenation.

Copyright and License

© 2024 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND).

Acknowledgement

G.J.G. acknowledges funding from the College of Science at George Mason University. M.P. was partially funded by the MIUR under the project PRIN2017RX9XXXY. We thank David Paisley for laboratory assistance at George Mason University, as well as Tyler Goepfert and Trevor Martin for Quadrupole Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry assistance at Arizona State University.

Contributions

M.N.R. and G.J.G. designed research; M.N.R., G.J.G., T.G., M.A.K., F.L.H.T., A.J.K., and M.P. performed research; M.P. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; M.N.R., G.J.G., T.G., M.A.K., F.L.H.T., A.J.K., and M.P. analyzed data; and M.N.R., G.J.G., and M.P. wrote the paper.

Data Availability

All geochemical data generated here are publicly available at: https://zenodo.org/records/10638026 (67). Splits of samples are reposited at George Mason University and are available upon request.
 

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no competing interest.

Files

remírez-et-al-2024-carbonate-uranium-isotopes-record-global-expansion-of-marine-anoxia-during-the-toarcian-oceanic.pdf

Additional details

Created:
June 25, 2024
Modified:
June 28, 2024