Abstract
Abstract A high-resolution study of carbon isotope stratigraphy and calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy has been undertaken on the Upper Cretaceous sediments of the Gurpi Formation (Fm.) in the Bowan section (Zagros Basin, Iran). The integrated stratigraphy of the section allows for large-scale correlation with Upper Cretaceous reference sections (Gubbio, Italy; German Chalk; Shahneshin, Iran) and suggests the age of the Gurpi Fm. at Bowan to be latest Santonian to early Selandian. Correlation of the isotopic data from Bowan to the Shahneshin section in the central Zagros mountains shows remarkable similarity that may be related to effects specific to the peculiar stratigraphy of the area and, possibly, to the long-term evolution of seawater δ13C in the Zagros Basin. A sequence stratigraphic framework is proposed for both sections. Correlation of the two sections to data from the Boreal realm, Indian Ocean, equatorial Pacific Ocean, and other Tethyan sections suggests that it is possible to identify some of the previously defined major carbon isotope events in the Iranian sections. Significant differences, however, are observed in absolute values and overall amplitude of carbon isotope trends. In particular, our results show that the Santonian/Campanian boundary event (SCBE) which is a well-defined, double-peaked, positive excursion at Gubbio and in the Boreal realm is absent in the Zagros Basin, eroded by a major sequence boundary. Moreover, the most pronounced feature in Upper Cretaceous carbon isotope ratios of the Zagros Basin carbonates is an overarching maximum culminating in the early Campanian which correlates with a discrete, low-amplitude (0.25‰) positive excursion defined as the papillosa Zone event at Gubbio and in the Boreal realm. Our results thus reveal a contrasting evolution of carbonate δ13C during the early Campanian between different oceanic basins but also within the Tethys.
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