open access publication

Article, 2023

Environmental and trilobite diversity changes during the middle-late Cambrian SPICE event

Geological Society of America Bulletin, ISSN 0016-7606, 1943-2674, 10.1130/b36421.1

Contributors

Zhang, Lei [1] Algeo, Thomas J 0000-0002-3333-7035 [1] [2] Zhao, Laishi [1] Dahl, Tais Wittchen 0000-0003-4629-8036 [1] [3] Chen, Zhongqiang Q 0000-0001-5341-6913 [1] Zhang, Zihu [4] Poulton, Simon W 0000-0001-7621-189X [1] [5] Hughes, Nigel C [6] Gou, Xueqing [1] Li, Chao 0000-0001-8608-7845 [4]

Affiliations

  1. [1] China University of Geosciences
  2. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  3. [2] University of Cincinnati
  4. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  5. [3] University of Copenhagen
  6. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  7. [4] Chengdu University of Technology
  8. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  9. [5] University of Leeds
  10. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];

Abstract

The Steptoean Positive Carbon Isotope Excursion (SPICE) event at ca. 497−494 Ma was a major carbon-cycle perturbation of the late Cambrian that coincided with rapid diversity changes among trilobites. Several scenarios (e.g., climatic/oceanic cooling and seawater anoxia) have been proposed to account for an extinction of trilobites at the onset of SPICE, but the exact mechanism remains unclear. Here, we present a chemostratigraphic study of carbonate carbon and carbonate-associated sulfate sulfur isotopes (δ13Ccarb and δ34SCAS) and elemental redox proxies (UEF, MoEF, and Corg/P), augmented by secular trilobite diversity data, from both upper slope (Wangcun) and lower slope (Duibian) successions from the Jiangnan Slope, South China, spanning the Drumian to lower Jiangshanian. Redox data indicate locally/regionally well-oxygenated conditions throughout the SPICE event in both study sections except for low-oxygen (hypoxic) conditions within the rising limb of the SPICE (early-middle Paibian) at Duibian. As in coeval sections globally, the reported δ13Ccarb and δ34SCAS profiles exhibit first-order coupling throughout the SPICE event, reflecting co-burial of organic matter and pyrite controlled by globally integrated marine productivity, organic preservation rates, and shelf hypoxia. Increasing δ34SCAS in the “Early SPICE” interval (late Guzhangian) suggests that significant environmental change (e.g., global-oceanic hypoxia) was under way before the global carbon cycle was markedly affected. Assessment of trilobite range data within a high-resolution biostratigraphic framework for the middle-late Cambrian facilitated re-evaluation of the relationship of the SPICE to contemporaneous biodiversity changes. Trilobite diversity in South China declined during the Early SPICE (corresponding to the End-Marjuman Biomere Extinction, or EMBE, of Laurentia) and at the termination of the SPICE (corresponding to the End-Steptoean Biomere Extinction, or ESBE, of Laurentia), consistent with biotic patterns from other cratons. We infer that oxygen minimum zone and/or shelf hypoxia expanded as a result of locally enhanced productivity due to intensified upwelling following climatic cooling, and that expanded hypoxia played a major role in the EMBE at the onset of SPICE. During the SPICE event, global-ocean ventilation promoted marine biotic recovery, but termination of SPICE-related cooling in the late Paibian may have reduced global-ocean circulation, triggering further redox changes that precipitated the ESBE. Major changes in both marine environmental conditions and trilobite diversity during the late Guzhangian demonstrate that the SPICE event began earlier than the Guzhangian-Paibian boundary, as previously proposed.

Keywords

Cambrian, China, Craton, Drumian, EMB, ESB, Early, Jiangnan, Jiangnan Slope, Late Cambrian, Ma, Middle-Late, Paibian, SPICE event, South, South China, Steptoean Positive Carbon Isotope Excursion, assessment, biodiversity change, biostratigraphic framework, biotic patterns, biotic recovery, boundaries, carbon, carbon cycle, carbon cycle perturbations, carbon isotope excursion, carbon-carbon, changes, chemostratigraphic study, circulation, climatic cooling, co-burial, coeval sections, conditions, cooling, coupling, cycle, data, diverse data, diversity, diversity changes, elemental redox proxies, enhanced production, environmental changes, environmental conditions, events, excursion, extinction, extinction of trilobites, framework, global carbon cycle, global ocean circulation, global ocean ventilation, high-resolution biostratigraphic framework, hypoxia, intensified upwelling, isotope excursion, isotopes, limb, low oxygen, lower slope, marine, marine biotic recovery, marine environmental conditions, marine products, matter, mechanism, minimum zone, organ preservation rate, organic matter, oxygen, oxygen minimum zone, patterns, perturbation, positive carbon isotope excursion, preservation rate, production, profile, proxies, pyrite, range data, rate, re-evaluation, recovery, redox, redox changes, redox data, redox proxies, relationship, rising limb, scenarios, section, shelf, shelf hypoxia, slope, study, study section, success, sulfur isotopes, termination, trilobite diversity, trilobites, upper slope, upwelling, ventilation, well-oxygenated conditions, zone

Funders

  • Directorate for Geosciences

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