Abstract
The sediments deposited in continental lake systems record sensitive palaeoclimate signals and provide better perspectives for understanding rapid palaeoclimate changes and their implications. To better understand the terrestrial record and climate-driven organic matter enrichment mechanism in a low-latitude region, which have rarely been investigated, we studied the Eocene terrestrial records from the Beibuwan Basin, South China Sea (SCS). Cyclostratigraphic analysis was conducted to assess the orbital forcing. Milankovitch-scale astronomical signals were determined by spectral analyses, evolutionary Fast Fourier transform, and sedimentation rates estimation of the natural gamma ray logging data in the depth domain. A floating astronomical time scale (ATS) was constructed based on astronomical tuning that converts the depth domain to the time domain by sedimentation rates. The ATS was calibrated using published dating result of 35.2 Ma from the Eocene to the Oligocene. This ATS constrains the ages of two organic-rich lacustrine petroleum source intervals of the Eocene Liushagang Formation in the Beibuwan Basin at ∼49-47 Ma and ∼40.9–40.2 Ma, respectively. A comparison of the timing of these two source rocks with a published global benthic carbon and oxygen isotope series shows that they correspond to Eocene positive carbon isotope excursions. This finding suggests that organic carbon burial in Eocene lacustrine basins responded to early and middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (i.e., EECO and MECO). We used geochemical data based on X-ray fluorescence core scans for further investigation of the effect of orbital forcing on organic matter enrichment. The high Rb/Sr, K + Ti + Rb and Sr/Ca geochemical ratios and stable Mo and U/Th values all correspond to the precessional minimum, suggesting that the orbital precessional minimum is responsible for a warm and humid climate, and brackish and hypoxic water conditions. Thus, four schematic hypotheses were proposed to explain the effect of the precessional monsoonal climate on organic matter enrichment. This study provides a terrestrial record that documents the mid-Eocene global warming event well and provides evidence that the orbital precessional climate controlled organic matter enrichment in Asia's palaeolake.
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