Abstract

The Late Triassic was a particularly turbulent interval of the geologic past, marked by repeated paleoenvironmental instability culminating in the end-Triassic mass extinction (ETME). These episodes of disturbance are associated with enhanced volcanism, harbinger of the eventual break-up of Pangea. As evidenced by geochemical signals in the marine carbon isotope record, these events were often significant enough to disrupt the global carbon cycle. However, the duration and extent of ETME-associated disturbances leading up to the Triassic/Jurassic boundary (TJB) remain contentious. The present study investigates eight stratigraphic sections from across British Columbia to create a comprehensive Panthalassan carbon isotope record spanning the Norian to early Hettangian. Three distinct negative excursions are observed: an excursion proximal to the Norian/Rhaetian boundary (NRB), another excursion within the Rhaetian, and a final excursion coinciding with the TJB. This is generally consistent with prior studies, but suggests there may be no clear distinction between the negative excursion associated with the NRB, and the oldest Rhaetian “precursor” excursion proposed to be associated with the TJB. Several of the excursions observed in the present study are too large in magnitude to plausibly reflect global ocean water chemistry (∼10 ‰ compared to the expected ∼3 ‰), indicating some local mechanism was amplifying these carbon isotope excursions. A potential explanation is increased organic carbon respiration in restricted marine environments, triggered during episodes of paleoenvironmental disturbance. Regardless, this evidence for repeated carbon isotope excursions supports paleontological data suggesting that the ETME is not a singular and geologically instantaneous event at the TJB, but is instead the amalgamation of several turnovers beginning as early as the NRB.

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