Geologic evidence for a mantle superplume event at 1.9 Ga
Open Access
- 5 December 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
- Vol. 1 (12)
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2000gc000095
Abstract
Both preserved and restored areal distributions of Proterozoic marine intracratonic, passive margin, and platform sediments show a prominent peak at ∼1.9 Ga, indicating that shallow marine sediments were widespread on the continents and that sea level was high at this time. The chemical index of alteration in shales deposited at this time was high, suggesting warm climates, possibly due to enhanced CO2levels in the atmosphere. High sea level and warms climate may also explain an abundance of black shale, banded iron formations, and shallow marine phosphate deposits and an increase in the number of occurrences and diversity of stromatolites in general and microdigitate stromatolites at 1.9 Ga. All of these observations are consistent with a 1.9‐Ga superplume event. The occurrence of only a minor positive carbon isotope shift in marine carbonates at 1.9 Ga indicates that the relative rates of burial of organic and oxidized carbon remained about the same as at present. Slightly low87Sr/86Sr isotopic ratios in seawater at 1.9 Ga reflect increased mantle input of Sr from the proposed superplume event, whereas higher ratios at 1.85–1.75 Ga may reflect increased input of continental Sr from a growing supercontinent. The first massive sulfate evaporites in the geologic record at 1.8–1.6 Ga follow the possible 1.9‐Ga superplume event. This may reflect an increase in both oxidation state and carbonate deposition in the oceans as plume‐related volcanism wanes.Keywords
This publication has 113 references indexed in Scilit:
- South Australian record of a Rodinian epicontinental basin and its mid-neoproterozoic breakup (∼700 Ma) to form the Palaeo-Pacific OceanPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Episodic continental growth models: afterthoughts and extensionsPublished by Elsevier ,2000
- Stratigraphic resolution of a multiphase intracratonic basin system: The McArthur Basin, northern AustraliaAustralian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1999
- The 2.7–2.0 Ga volcano-sedimentary record of Africa, India and Australia: evidence for global and local changes in sea level and continental freeboardPrecambrian Research, 1999
- Foreland basins and gold-bearing conglomerates: a new model for the Jacobina Basin (Sa˜o Francisco province, Brazil)Precambrian Research, 1997
- The late Archean to Mesoproterozoic major unconformity-bounded units of the Kaapvaal Province of southern AfricaPrecambrian Research, 1995
- Geochemistry of FeMn formations of the Archaean Sandur schist belt, India - mixing of clastic and chemical processes at a shallow shelfPrecambrian Research, 1995
- Structural development of the King Leopold Orogen, Kimberley region, Western AustraliaJournal of Structural Geology, 1990
- Stratigraphy and depositional setting of the Proterozoic Snowy Pass Supergroup, southeastern Wyoming: Record of an early Proterozoic Atlantic-type cratonic marginGSA Bulletin, 1983
- Geochronology of la tinta Upper Proterozoic sedimentary rocks, ArgentinaPrecambrian Research, 1982