Abstract

One of the most dramatic episodes of sustained diversification of marine ecosystems in Earth history took place during the Early to Middle Ordovician Period. Changes in climate, oceanographic conditions, and trophic structure are hypothesised to have been major drivers of these biotic events, but relatively little is known about the composition and stability of marine microbial communities controlling biogeochemical cycles at the base of the food chain. This study examines well-preserved, carbonate-rich strata spanning the Tremadocian through Upper Dapingian stages from the Oslobreen Group in Spitsbergen, Norway. Abundant bacterial lipid markers (elevated hopane/sterane ratios, average = 4.8; maximum of 13.1), detection of Chlorobi markers in organic-rich strata, and bulk nitrogen isotopes (δ15Ntotal) averaging 0 to −1‰ for the open marine facies, suggest episodes of water column redox-stratification and that primary production was likely limited by fixed nitrogen availability in the photic zone. Near absence of the C30 sterane marine algal biomarker, 24-n-propylcholestane (24-npc), in most samples supports and extends the previously observed hiatus of 24-npc in Early Paleozoic (Late Cambrian to Early Silurian) marine environments. Very high abundances of 3β-methylhopanes (average = 9.9%; maximum of 16.8%), extends this biomarker characteristic to Early Ordovician strata for the first time and may reflect enhanced and sustained marine methane cycling during this interval of fluctuating climatic and low sulfate marine conditions. Olenid trilobite fossils are prominent in strata deposited during an interval of marine transgression with biomarker evidence for episodic euxinia/anoxia extending into the photic zone of the water column.

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