Palaeoenvironments and palaeoceanography changes across the Jurassic/Cretaceous boundary in the Arctic realm: case study of the Nordvik section (north Siberia, Russia)

  • Victor A. Zakharov
  • Mikhail A. Rogov Geological Institute of RAS
  • Oksana S. Dzyuba
  • Karel Žák
  • Martin Košt’ák
  • Petr Pruner
  • Petr Skupien
  • Martin Chadima
  • Martin Mazuch
  • Boris L. Nikitenko
Keywords: Biodiversity, stable isotopes, J/K boundary, Arctic Realm, palaeoceanography

Abstract

The Jurassic/Cretaceous transition was accompanied by significant changes in palaeoceanography and palaeoenvironments in the Tethyan Realm, but outside the Tethys such data are very scarce. Here we present results of a study of the most complete section in the Panboreal Superrealm, the Nordvik section. Belemnite δ18O data show an irregular decrease from values reaching up to +1.6‰ in the Middle Oxfordian and from +0.8 to −1.7‰ in the basal Ryazanian, indicating a prolonged warming. The biodiversity changes were strongly related to sea-level oscillations, showing a relatively low belemnite and high ammonite diversity during sea-level rise, accompanied by a decrease of the macrobenthos taxonomical richness. The most prominent sea-level rise is marked by the occurrence of open sea ammonites with Pacific affinities. Peak abundances of spores and prasinophytes correlate with a negative excursion in organic carbon δ13C near the J/K boundary and could reflect blooms of green algae caused by disturbance of the marine ecosystem.

Keywords: Biodiversity; stable isotopes; J/K boundary; Arctic Realm; palaeoceanography

(Published: 25 March 2014)

Citation: Polar Research 2014, 33, 19714, http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/polar.v33.19714

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Published
2014-03-25
How to Cite
Zakharov V. A., Rogov M. A., Dzyuba O. S., Žák K., Košt’ák M., Pruner P., Skupien P., Chadima M., Mazuch M., & Nikitenko B. L. (2014). Palaeoenvironments and palaeoceanography changes across the Jurassic/Cretaceous boundary in the Arctic realm: case study of the Nordvik section (north Siberia, Russia). Polar Research, 33. https://doi.org/10.3402/polar.v33.19714
Section
Research/review articles

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