Abstract

The Evans Ferry section from the Appalachian Basin of eastern North America has been analyzed for chemostratigraphic trends to elucidate possible causal mechanisms facilitating the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE). Paired stable isotope (δ13C and δ34S) analyses were used in this carbonate-dominated locality from the Appalachian Basin to reconstruct the marine redox states during this key period of rapid biodiversification. This succession is one of the most expanded Sandbian Stage (Upper Ordovician) deposits known from North America, and it allows new high-resolution reconstructions of long-term, global carbon and sulfur cycle fluctuations. The integrated geochemical and sequence-stratigraphic investigation presented here from the Laurentian epeiric seaway allows for possible identification of the contraction and expansion of reducing water masses during the Middle–Late Ordovician that may have been linked to global-marine paleoredox dynamics. Utilizing new conodont-based 87Sr/86Sr isotope stratigraphy along with previous conodont biostratigraphy, we can confidently correlate our stable isotope profiles to other carbonate successions globally. Carbonate facies indicate that this area experienced partial restriction from open-marine conditions during certain intervals in the Sandbian. These semi-restricted environments record carbon (δ13Ccarb) isotope trends that are secular in nature, as they can be correlated to other successions across Laurentia and Baltica. We identify several intervals when δ13Ccarb and δ34SCAS (carbonate-associated sulfate) trends are decoupled. These inverse stratigraphic trends are, at times, followed by parallel positive shifts in δ13Ccarb and δ34SCAS. Causal mechanisms for the observed decoupled δ13C and δ34S trends may include a wide variety of factors such as more closed-system, local biogeochemical processes associated in part with diagenesis, or they could instead reflect variations in the global fluxes of organic matter and pyrite burial linked to changing marine paleoredox conditions. The positive covariation in trends presented here likely represents transient increases in organic carbon and pyrite burial in response to expansion of reducing marine environments.

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