South China Sheds Light on Late Paleozoic Climate Change

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Reliable carbonate carbon isotopes (δ13Ccarb) can reflect variations in global carbon cycling, and thus the paleoclimate and paleoceanographic conditions. However, significant depositional hiatus in low-latitude areas occurred during the late Pennsylvanian to early Cisuralian.

Frequent subaerial exposures and stratigraphic discontinuities could have potentially altered the primary δ13Ccarb signals, which collectively hampered a valid global correlation at this time. Indeed, a global δ13Ccarb record is hardly established for chemostratigraphic correlation and global carbon cycle modeling.

Researchers led by Ph.D. student YANG Wenli and Prof. CHEN Jitao from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NIGPAS) have investigated sedimentary facies and high-resolution carbonate δ13C on the Pennsylvanian and Cisuralian carbonate slope successions from the South China Block.

Their findings were published in Global and Planetary Change on Jan. 28.

The South China Block was located in the low-latitude region at the confluence of the eastern Paleo-Tethys Ocean and western Panthalassic Ocean during the Pennsylvanian and Cisuralian. Various sedimentary facies ranging from carbonate platforms to regional slopes and basins developed in South China during the Pennsylvanian to Cisuralian, which were well connected to open ocean waters, potentially recording a global seawater geochemical signal.

In this study, detailed sedimentary facies analysis and high-resolution δ13Ccarb time series during the late Pennsylvanian to early Cisuralian suggested that the δ13Ccarb recorded in slope carbonates of the Luodian Basin might represent a reliable proxy for global carbon cycling.

Across the Carboniferous-Permian transition, the well-coupled δ13Ccarb, atmospheric pCO2, and the inferred glacial records, showed a potential linkage between increased rate of organic carbon burial and the apex of the Late Paleozoic Ice Age.

The decoupling between the δ13Ccarb and atmospheric pCO2 during the middle Asselian to mid-late Sakmarian suggested that enhanced silicate weathering might have played a dominant role in drawdown of atmospheric pCO2 and sustained glaciation.

The rapid negative excursion in δ13Ccarb coincided with the rapid rise of atmospheric pCO2 and the substantial decrease in inferred glacial records, suggesting that the prolonged greenhouse gas accumulation potentially drove the transition from icehouse to greenhouse climate states.

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