Publication | Closed Access
The Source and Fate of Massive Carbon Input During the Latest Paleocene Thermal Maximum
375
Citations
32
References
1999
Year
EngineeringPaleoceanographyMarine ChemistryEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceOrganic GeochemistryPaleoenvironmental ChangeGeochronologyCarbon CycleMassive Carbon InputCarbon SequestrationMarine GeologyBiogeochemistryBlake NosePaleoclimatologyMassive ReleaseEarth's ClimateMethane ReleaseNatural Gas Hydrate SystemCretaceous-paleogene BoundaryPaleoecology
Lithologic, faunal, seismic, and isotopic evidence from the Blake Nose (subtropical western North Atlantic) links a massive release of biogenic methane ∼55.5 million years ago to a warming of deep-ocean and high-latitude surface waters, a large perturbation in the combined ocean-atmosphere carbon cycle (the largest of the past 90 million years), a mass extinction event in benthic faunas, and a radiation of mammalian orders. The deposition of a mud clast interval and seismic evidence for slope disturbance are associated with intermediate water warming, massive carbon input to the global exogenic carbon cycle, pelagic carbonate dissolution, a decrease in dissolved oxygen, and a benthic foraminiferal extinction event. These events provide evidence to confirm the gas hydrate dissociation hypothesis and identify the Blake Nose as a site of methane release.
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