Abstract

AbstractVariations in depositional rates affect the temporal depositional resolutions of proxies used for paleoenvironmental reconstructions; for example, condensation can make reconstructed environmental changes appear very abrupt. This is commonly addressed by transforming proxy data using age models, but this approach is limited to situations where numerical ages are available or can be reliably inferred by correlation. Here we propose a new solution, in which relative age models are constructed based on proxies for depositional rates. As a case study, we use the onset of the late Silurian Lau Carbon Isotope Excursion (LCIE) in Gotland, Sweden. The studied succession is a gradual record of shallowing upward in a tropical, neritic carbonate platform. As proxies for depositional rates we tested thorium concentration, carbonate content, and the concentration of pelagic palynomorphs. These three proxies were used to create relative age models using the previously published DAIME model. We applied these models to transform the δ13Ccarb values as well as concentrations of selected redox‐sensitive elements. The three relative age models yielded qualitatively similar results. In our case study, variations in depositional rates resulted in peaks of redox proxies appearing up to 76% higher when taken at face value, compared to when accounting for these rates. In the most extreme cases, our corrections resulted in a reversal in the stratigraphic trend of elemental concentrations. This approach can be applied and developed across depositional setting and types of paleoenvironmental proxies. It provides a flexible tool for developing quantitative models to improve our understanding of the stratigraphic record.

Highlights

  • We deliberately addressed a section that is of global interest but lacks a numerical “absolute” age model to illustrate how such situation can be approached, but analogous transformations using the DAIME model can be done using numerical ages, a mixture of relative and numerical age model, and even depositional rates expressed at the ordinal scale, for example, low for transgressive and high for regressive deposits (Hohmann, 2018, 2020)

  • Relative age models constructed from three proxies for depositional rate have shown similar results in our Silurian text case

  • The model based on thorium input indicated the strongest deviation from constant depositional rate, and the model based on carbonate content the weakest

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Summary

Introduction

Variations in the volume and rate of influx of sediment can completely transform fossil accumulations by concentrating and diluting individual hard parts. In extreme cases, they can lead to mixing of fossils from completely different environments and stratigraphic ages at condensed surfaces or to smearing out of the record of geologically abrupt events (Carroll et al, 2016; Fürsich & Aberhan, 1990; Kidwell, 1998; Kowalewski, 1996). The record of changes in any environment derived from proxies based on geochemistry needs to account for the stratigraphic completeness and depositional resolution of the sediment in which they are measured

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