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Pangean great lake paleoecology on the cusp of the end-Triassic extinction

Pangean great lake paleoecology on the cusp of the end-Triassic extinction
Pangean great lake paleoecology on the cusp of the end-Triassic extinction
Triassic and Early Jurassic age lacustrine deposits of eastern North American rift basins preserve a spectacular record of precession-related Milankovitch forcing in the Pangean tropics in the wake of the end-Triassic extinction event (ETE). The abundant and well-preserved fossil fish assemblages from these great lakes show cyclical changes that track the permeating hierarchy of climatic cycles. To detail ecosystem processes correlating with succession of fish communities, bulk ?13C was measured through a 100 ky series of precession-forced lake level cycles in the lower Shuttle Meadow Formation of the Hartford rift basin, Connecticut, that were deposited within 50 ky after the ETE. The deep-water phase of one of these cycles, the Bluff Head Bed, has produced thousands of articulated fish. There are fluctuations in the bulk ?13Corg in the cyclical strata that reflect differing degrees of lake water stratification, nutrient levels, and relative proportion of algal vs. plant derived organic matter that trace fish community changes. Extrinsic changes in the global exchangeable reservoirs can be excluded as an origin of this variability because compound-specific ?13C of n-alkanes from plant leaf waxes in the same strata show no such variability. Although higher taxonomic levels of the fish communities responded largely by sorting of taxa by environmental forcing, at the species level the holostean genus Semionotus responded by in situ evolution, and ultimately extinction, of a species flock. Fluctuations at the higher frequency, climatic precessional scale are mirrored at lower frequency, eccentricity modulated scales, all following the lake-level hierarchical pattern. Thus, changes in lacustrine isotopic ratios amplify the Milankovitch climate signal that was already intensified by sequelae of the end-Triassic extinctions. The degree to which the ecological structure of modern lakes responds to similar environmental cyclicity is largely unknown, but similar patterns and processes are present within the Neogene history of the East African great lakes.
central atlantic magmatic province, end-triassic extinction, paleolimnology, species flocks, carbon isotopes, semionotidae, redfieldiidae
0031-0182
1-17
Whiteside, Jessica H.
5d9ad7aa-eba3-4ad9-9f6f-81be71b6829b
Olsen, Paul E.
bdbec40b-82ed-41ac-8028-b6c333206f16
Eglinton, Timothy I.
d313bc97-28e4-4ee6-a5c8-f0c19bcdbe92
Cornet, Bruce
95a4ca47-b1be-42ae-8926-1dca54dadd30
McDonald, Nicholas G.
9f5a2dd8-35ed-4150-8618-45466d5479f7
Huber, Philip
01a5cb3e-716e-411f-9cd4-9c94866feac4
Whiteside, Jessica H.
5d9ad7aa-eba3-4ad9-9f6f-81be71b6829b
Olsen, Paul E.
bdbec40b-82ed-41ac-8028-b6c333206f16
Eglinton, Timothy I.
d313bc97-28e4-4ee6-a5c8-f0c19bcdbe92
Cornet, Bruce
95a4ca47-b1be-42ae-8926-1dca54dadd30
McDonald, Nicholas G.
9f5a2dd8-35ed-4150-8618-45466d5479f7
Huber, Philip
01a5cb3e-716e-411f-9cd4-9c94866feac4

Whiteside, Jessica H., Olsen, Paul E., Eglinton, Timothy I., Cornet, Bruce, McDonald, Nicholas G. and Huber, Philip (2011) Pangean great lake paleoecology on the cusp of the end-Triassic extinction. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology, 301 (1-4), 1-17. (doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2010.11.025).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Triassic and Early Jurassic age lacustrine deposits of eastern North American rift basins preserve a spectacular record of precession-related Milankovitch forcing in the Pangean tropics in the wake of the end-Triassic extinction event (ETE). The abundant and well-preserved fossil fish assemblages from these great lakes show cyclical changes that track the permeating hierarchy of climatic cycles. To detail ecosystem processes correlating with succession of fish communities, bulk ?13C was measured through a 100 ky series of precession-forced lake level cycles in the lower Shuttle Meadow Formation of the Hartford rift basin, Connecticut, that were deposited within 50 ky after the ETE. The deep-water phase of one of these cycles, the Bluff Head Bed, has produced thousands of articulated fish. There are fluctuations in the bulk ?13Corg in the cyclical strata that reflect differing degrees of lake water stratification, nutrient levels, and relative proportion of algal vs. plant derived organic matter that trace fish community changes. Extrinsic changes in the global exchangeable reservoirs can be excluded as an origin of this variability because compound-specific ?13C of n-alkanes from plant leaf waxes in the same strata show no such variability. Although higher taxonomic levels of the fish communities responded largely by sorting of taxa by environmental forcing, at the species level the holostean genus Semionotus responded by in situ evolution, and ultimately extinction, of a species flock. Fluctuations at the higher frequency, climatic precessional scale are mirrored at lower frequency, eccentricity modulated scales, all following the lake-level hierarchical pattern. Thus, changes in lacustrine isotopic ratios amplify the Milankovitch climate signal that was already intensified by sequelae of the end-Triassic extinctions. The degree to which the ecological structure of modern lakes responds to similar environmental cyclicity is largely unknown, but similar patterns and processes are present within the Neogene history of the East African great lakes.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 3 December 2010
Published date: 11 February 2011
Keywords: central atlantic magmatic province, end-triassic extinction, paleolimnology, species flocks, carbon isotopes, semionotidae, redfieldiidae
Organisations: Paleooceanography & Palaeoclimate

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 354768
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/354768
ISSN: 0031-0182
PURE UUID: d8234734-4527-4aa2-b348-ac489f7a82d5

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Date deposited: 19 Jul 2013 10:18
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:24

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Contributors

Author: Paul E. Olsen
Author: Timothy I. Eglinton
Author: Bruce Cornet
Author: Nicholas G. McDonald
Author: Philip Huber

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