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

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 d18O 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 d13C near the J/K boundary and could reflect blooms of green algae caused by disturbance of the marine ecosystem.

Description

Subject(s)

biodiversity, stable isotopes, J/K boundary, Arctic Realm, palaeoceanography

Citation

Polar Research. 2014, vol. 33, art. no. 19714.