Abstract

Exceptionally well-preserved fossil specimens in the Fossil Basin of the Green River Formation (GRF) have made it the subject of extensive paleontological study, but the organic molecular framework that evolved during a key paleoclimatic and fossil-bearing interval during the early Eocene is poorly understood. Whereas the organic geochemistry of the larger co-eval GRF basins has been extensively characterized, our molecular understanding of the fossil-bearing layers in the Fossil Basin and the drivers of the exceptional fossilization therein remain unresolved. To bridge this gap, sediments from the famous 18″-layer — the fossiliferous horizon that is extensively quarried for exceptional soft-tissue fossils — were sampled for organic and isotopic geochemical characterisation. The results show that the Fossil Basin sedimentary archive is geochemically distinct from other GRF basins, as exemplified by the absence of the classical biomarker β-carotane and minimal evidence for the large green algal blooms that predominate in the other GRF lake basins. Photic zone euxinia (PZE), anoxia, and a freshwater cap enabled development of a productive and diverse ecosystem. Salinity and density stratification prevented vertical mixing of the water column and supported preservation of decaying carcasses. In contrast to other GRF basins, the small areal extent and ellipsoid shape of the Fossil Basin focussed terrestrial and freshwater inputs into the lake, resulting in ideal conditions for preservation of an exceptional fossil record.

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