Abstract
The marine carbon isotope record (&#948;13C) used for chemostratigraphy and reconstruction of carbon cycle dynamics is constructed using carbonate rocks, but there is evidence that carbonate cements hosted within fine-grained clastics (shales and mudstones) in some settings may also express &#948;13C trends that covary with the record from carbonates. We present new carbon and oxygen isotopic data from shale-hosted carbonate cements (&#948;13Ccarb-sh and &#948;18Ocarb-sh, n = 107, <16 wt% CaCO3) of the terminal Ediacaran Nama Group, Namibia (&#8805;550.5 to <539.6 Million years ago; Ma). These data are compared with the published carbon and oxygen isotopic record from coeval carbonates (&#948;13Ccarb and &#948;18Ocarb, n = 1611) and total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations. We show that &#948;13Ccarb-sh compositions in samples of intermediate to high CaCO3/TOC can approximate contemporaneous &#948;13Ccarb in open marine mixed carbonate-clastic settings. By contrast, &#948;13Ccarb-sh values in samples with low CaCO3/TOC that were deposited in clastic settings distant from the locus of carbonate deposition are more negative than contemporaneous &#948;13Ccarb. These data suggest that &#948;13Ccarb-sh may approach seawater composition in samples of low TOC when deposited in high dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) settings, where carbonate can rapidly precipitate from seawater during early diagenesis. However, the use of &#948;13Ccarb-sh to infill gaps in the existing &#948;13Ccarb record remains uncertain, even when these criteria are fulfilled. Intervals of &#948;13C-&#948;18O co-variability in the Nama Group succession appear to correlate with units where seawater mixing with meteoric fluids was more likely during early diagenesis, such as clastic-dominated settings, which also show significant decreasing &#948;18O through time with gradual sub-basin infill.We further consider uncertainties in lithostratigraphic correlation of the upper Urusis Formation of the Nama Group that enable three new possible correlations to be proposed for &#948;13Ccarb-sh data within the terminal Ediacaran to lower Cambrian (<542.65 Ma to >535 Ma) regional and global &#948;13Ccarb records.
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