info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Life and death in the Chicxulub impact crater: A record of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum
Fecha
2020-10-19Registro en:
Smith, Vann; Warny, Sophie; Grice, Kliti; Schaefer, Bettina; Whalen, Michael T.; et al.; Life and death in the Chicxulub impact crater: A record of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum; Copernicus Publications; Climate of the Past; 16; 5; 19-10-2020; 1889-1899
1814-9324
1814-9332
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Smith, Vann
Warny, Sophie
Grice, Kliti
Schaefer, Bettina
Whalen, Michael T.
Vellekoop, Johan
Chenot, Elise
Gulick, Sean P. S.
Arenillas, Ignacio
Arz, Jose A.
Bauersachs, Thorsten
Bralower, Timothy
Demory, Francois
Gattacceca, Jerome
Jones, Heather
Lofi, Johanna
Lowery, Christopher M.
Morgan, Joanna
Nuñez Otaño, Noelia Betiana
O'Keefe, Jennifer M. K.
O'Malley, Katherine
Rodríguez Tovar, Francisco J.
Schwark, Lorenz
Resumen
Thermal stress on the biosphere during the extreme warmth of the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) was most severe at low latitudes, with sea surface temperatures at some localities exceeding the 35 ∘C at which marine organisms experience heat stress. Relatively few equivalent terrestrial sections have been identified, and the response of land plants to this extreme heat is still poorly understood. Here, we present a new record of the PETM from the peak ring of the Chicxulub impact crater that has been identified based on nannofossil biostratigraphy, an acme of the dinoflagellate genus Apectodinium, and a negative carbon isotope excursion. Geochemical and microfossil proxies show that the PETM is marked by elevated TEXH86-based sea surface temperatures (SSTs) averaging ∼37.8 ∘C, an increase in terrestrial input and surface productivity, salinity stratification, and bottom water anoxia, with biomarkers for green and purple sulfur bacteria indicative of photic zone euxinia in the early part of the event. Pollen and plants spores in this core provide the first PETM floral assemblage described from Mexico, Central America, and the northern Caribbean. The source area was a diverse coastal shrubby tropical forest with a remarkably high abundance of fungal spores, indicating humid conditions. Thus, while seafloor anoxia devastated the benthic marine biota and dinoflagellate assemblages were heat-stressed, the terrestrial plant ecosystem thrived.