Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference abstract in proceedingsResearch

Standard

Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. / Ruhl, Micha; Bjerrum, Christian J.; Canfield, Donald Eugene; Stemmerik, Lars.

The Permian Strata of Svalbard: Norwegian Polar institute, Tromsø, april 10-12, 2013 Abstracts and Proceedings. ed. / David Bond; Dierk Blomeier. Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI), 2013. p. 20-21.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference abstract in proceedingsResearch

Harvard

Ruhl, M, Bjerrum, CJ, Canfield, DE & Stemmerik, L 2013, Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. in D Bond & D Blomeier (eds), The Permian Strata of Svalbard: Norwegian Polar institute, Tromsø, april 10-12, 2013 Abstracts and Proceedings. Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI), pp. 20-21. <http://www.npolar.no/npcms/export/sites/np/en/events/2013/04-10-the-permian-of-svalbard/permian-strata-of-svalbard-abstracts-and-proceedings.pdf>

APA

Ruhl, M., Bjerrum, C. J., Canfield, D. E., & Stemmerik, L. (2013). Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. In D. Bond, & D. Blomeier (Eds.), The Permian Strata of Svalbard: Norwegian Polar institute, Tromsø, april 10-12, 2013 Abstracts and Proceedings (pp. 20-21). Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI). http://www.npolar.no/npcms/export/sites/np/en/events/2013/04-10-the-permian-of-svalbard/permian-strata-of-svalbard-abstracts-and-proceedings.pdf

Vancouver

Ruhl M, Bjerrum CJ, Canfield DE, Stemmerik L. Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. In Bond D, Blomeier D, editors, The Permian Strata of Svalbard: Norwegian Polar institute, Tromsø, april 10-12, 2013 Abstracts and Proceedings. Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI). 2013. p. 20-21

Author

Ruhl, Micha ; Bjerrum, Christian J. ; Canfield, Donald Eugene ; Stemmerik, Lars. / Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. The Permian Strata of Svalbard: Norwegian Polar institute, Tromsø, april 10-12, 2013 Abstracts and Proceedings. editor / David Bond ; Dierk Blomeier. Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI), 2013. pp. 20-21

Bibtex

@inbook{c7bbec2700ee4300a36645fecdf3e351,
title = "Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction",
abstract = "Earth{\textquoteright}s history is marked by multiple events of ocean anoxia developing along continental margins and po¬tentially into the open ocean realm. These events of¬ten coincide with the emplacement of large igneous provinces (LIPs) on continents, major perturbations of global geochemical cycles and marine (mass) ex¬tinction. The geographic and temporal extend and the intensity (ferruginous vs. euxinic) of anoxic con¬ditions is, however, strongly debated and not well constraint. This complicates understanding of close coupling between Earth{\textquoteright}s physical, chemical and bi¬ological processes. We studied ocean redox change over the largest mass extinction event in Earth history, at the Permian-Tri¬assic boundary (at ~252 Ma). This event is marked by a major perturbation in the global exogenic carbon cycle (and associated major negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE)), likely initiated by carbon outgassing from the Siberian Traps. We measured redox-sensitive trace element concentrations (e.g. Mo, Cu, U) and the speciation of iron [Fe-HR/Fe-T and Fe-PY/ Fe- HR] in marine sediments from Svalbard (Festningen). We compare these data to additional, new, high-lati-tude data from eastern Greenland and the equatorial Tethys realm in Iran. We show that the Permian-Tri¬assic boundary at Svalbard is marked by 2 phases of euxinic (sulfidic) ocean conditions. An initial short phase at the onset of atmospheric carbon release is separated from a subsequent longer phase by a re¬turn to ferruginous ocean conditions (anoxic but not euxinic) coinciding with the main extinction event. Molybdenum enrichments, often indicative for freely available sulfide in the water-column, only occur dur¬ing the second phase of euxinia. This pattern of ocean redox-change in Svalbard direct¬ly reflects similar trends in Greenland and Iran. It sug¬gests a strongly decreased global ocean molybdenum (and possibly also ocean sulfate) inventory by massive molybdenum drawdown (and possibly pyrite buri¬al) at the onset of end-Permian atmospheric carbon release and leading up to the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. We compare these oceanographic changes to similar observations for the Triassic-Jurassic mass extinction and discuss environmental forcing, poten¬tially inherent to major volcanic events and leading to global environmental change and extinction",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Anoxia, Masseudd{\o}en, Trias-Jura gr{\ae}nsen, Redox forhold, oceanografi, hydrogen sulfid",
author = "Micha Ruhl and Bjerrum, {Christian J.} and Canfield, {Donald Eugene} and Lars Stemmerik",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
pages = "20--21",
editor = "David Bond and Dierk Blomeier",
booktitle = "The Permian Strata of Svalbard",
publisher = "Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI)",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Ocean redox change at the Permian-Triassic mass extinction

AU - Ruhl, Micha

AU - Bjerrum, Christian J.

AU - Canfield, Donald Eugene

AU - Stemmerik, Lars

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Earth’s history is marked by multiple events of ocean anoxia developing along continental margins and po¬tentially into the open ocean realm. These events of¬ten coincide with the emplacement of large igneous provinces (LIPs) on continents, major perturbations of global geochemical cycles and marine (mass) ex¬tinction. The geographic and temporal extend and the intensity (ferruginous vs. euxinic) of anoxic con¬ditions is, however, strongly debated and not well constraint. This complicates understanding of close coupling between Earth’s physical, chemical and bi¬ological processes. We studied ocean redox change over the largest mass extinction event in Earth history, at the Permian-Tri¬assic boundary (at ~252 Ma). This event is marked by a major perturbation in the global exogenic carbon cycle (and associated major negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE)), likely initiated by carbon outgassing from the Siberian Traps. We measured redox-sensitive trace element concentrations (e.g. Mo, Cu, U) and the speciation of iron [Fe-HR/Fe-T and Fe-PY/ Fe- HR] in marine sediments from Svalbard (Festningen). We compare these data to additional, new, high-lati-tude data from eastern Greenland and the equatorial Tethys realm in Iran. We show that the Permian-Tri¬assic boundary at Svalbard is marked by 2 phases of euxinic (sulfidic) ocean conditions. An initial short phase at the onset of atmospheric carbon release is separated from a subsequent longer phase by a re¬turn to ferruginous ocean conditions (anoxic but not euxinic) coinciding with the main extinction event. Molybdenum enrichments, often indicative for freely available sulfide in the water-column, only occur dur¬ing the second phase of euxinia. This pattern of ocean redox-change in Svalbard direct¬ly reflects similar trends in Greenland and Iran. It sug¬gests a strongly decreased global ocean molybdenum (and possibly also ocean sulfate) inventory by massive molybdenum drawdown (and possibly pyrite buri¬al) at the onset of end-Permian atmospheric carbon release and leading up to the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. We compare these oceanographic changes to similar observations for the Triassic-Jurassic mass extinction and discuss environmental forcing, poten¬tially inherent to major volcanic events and leading to global environmental change and extinction

AB - Earth’s history is marked by multiple events of ocean anoxia developing along continental margins and po¬tentially into the open ocean realm. These events of¬ten coincide with the emplacement of large igneous provinces (LIPs) on continents, major perturbations of global geochemical cycles and marine (mass) ex¬tinction. The geographic and temporal extend and the intensity (ferruginous vs. euxinic) of anoxic con¬ditions is, however, strongly debated and not well constraint. This complicates understanding of close coupling between Earth’s physical, chemical and bi¬ological processes. We studied ocean redox change over the largest mass extinction event in Earth history, at the Permian-Tri¬assic boundary (at ~252 Ma). This event is marked by a major perturbation in the global exogenic carbon cycle (and associated major negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE)), likely initiated by carbon outgassing from the Siberian Traps. We measured redox-sensitive trace element concentrations (e.g. Mo, Cu, U) and the speciation of iron [Fe-HR/Fe-T and Fe-PY/ Fe- HR] in marine sediments from Svalbard (Festningen). We compare these data to additional, new, high-lati-tude data from eastern Greenland and the equatorial Tethys realm in Iran. We show that the Permian-Tri¬assic boundary at Svalbard is marked by 2 phases of euxinic (sulfidic) ocean conditions. An initial short phase at the onset of atmospheric carbon release is separated from a subsequent longer phase by a re¬turn to ferruginous ocean conditions (anoxic but not euxinic) coinciding with the main extinction event. Molybdenum enrichments, often indicative for freely available sulfide in the water-column, only occur dur¬ing the second phase of euxinia. This pattern of ocean redox-change in Svalbard direct¬ly reflects similar trends in Greenland and Iran. It sug¬gests a strongly decreased global ocean molybdenum (and possibly also ocean sulfate) inventory by massive molybdenum drawdown (and possibly pyrite buri¬al) at the onset of end-Permian atmospheric carbon release and leading up to the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. We compare these oceanographic changes to similar observations for the Triassic-Jurassic mass extinction and discuss environmental forcing, poten¬tially inherent to major volcanic events and leading to global environmental change and extinction

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Anoxia

KW - Masseuddøen

KW - Trias-Jura grænsen

KW - Redox forhold

KW - oceanografi

KW - hydrogen sulfid

M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings

SP - 20

EP - 21

BT - The Permian Strata of Svalbard

A2 - Bond, David

A2 - Blomeier, Dierk

PB - Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI)

ER -

ID: 113802889