Global seawater redox trends during the Late Devonian mass extinction detected using U isotopes of marine limestones

2018 
Abstract The Late Devonian extinction ranks as one of the ‘big five’ Phanerozoic extinctions affecting up to 80% of marine species and is characterized by two major extinction events that are separated by δ 238 U) across a ∼7 My interval of well-dated Upper Devonian marine limestones from the Devil's Gate Formation in Nevada, USA. The measured δ 238 U curve shows no co-variation with local sediment-derived redox trends, water-depth dependent facies changes, redox-sensitive metals, TOC, or diagnostic elemental ratios. From these relationships, we infer that the δ 238 U curve represents global seawater redox conditions. Two negative δ 238 U excursions (indicating more reducing seawater) are observed with durations of ∼3.8 My (late Frasnian) and ∼1.1 My (early Famennian), respectively. Steady-state modeling of the observed −0.2 to −0.3‰ shifts in δ 238 U points to a ∼5–15% increase in the total area of anoxic seafloor during these excursions. The late Frasnian negative excursion is broadly coincident with the first extinction event (late rhenana Zone or lower Kellwasser event), whereas the early Famennian negative excursion (lower-middle triangularis zones) occurs after the most intense Frasnian–Famennian boundary (F–F) extinction event (upper Kellwasser event). Compilations of local sediment redox conditions from Upper Devonian marine deposits with conodont zone-level age control indicates that the extinction events were coincident with widespread anoxic deposits accumulating in subtropical epeiric sea and some open ocean settings, supporting previous interpretations that widespread marine anoxia had an important influence on the Late Devonian extinctions. The temporal relationships between global-ocean redox trends represented by the δ 238 U curve and the newly compiled subtropical marine redox sediment trends indicates that local epeiric seawaters carried a similar U-isotopic composition as the open ocean for the majority of the studied interval except for a brief interval (
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