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SIMONA TODARO

Shallow ocean oxygen decline during the end-Triassic mass extinction

  • Autori: He T.; Newton R.J.; Wignall P.B.; Reid S.; Dal Corso J.; Takahashi S.; Wu H.; Todaro S.; Di Stefano P.; Randazzo V.; Rigo M.; Dunhill A.M.
  • Anno di pubblicazione: 2022
  • Tipologia: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/537242

Abstract

The end-Triassic mass extinction (ETME) was associated with intensified deep-water anoxia in epicontinental seas and mid-depth waters, yet the absolute oxygenation state in the shallow ocean is uncharacterized. Here we report carbonate-associated iodine data from the peritidal Mount Sparagio section (Southern Italy) that documents the ETME (~ 200 Ma) in the western Tethys. We find a sharp drop in carbonate I/(Ca + Mg) ratios across the extinction horizon and persisting into the Early Jurassic. This records local dissolved oxygen and iodate decline in the near-surface ocean of low-latitude Tethys due to the development of depleted oxygen concentrations. Consequently, during the ETME even shallow-water animals, such as the megalodonts seen at Mount Sparagio, were likely the victims of oxygen-poor conditions. The shallow ocean deoxygenation coincides with the synchronous spread of deeper anoxic waters and widespread anoxic deposition on continental shelves and slopes. An upwards expansion of the mid-water oxygen minimum zone in the latest Triassic shoaled the oxycline and triggered a major marine crisis.