Paquier Event
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The Paquier Event (OAE1b) was an
oceanic anoxic event An anoxic event describes a period wherein large expanses of Earth's oceans were depleted of dissolved Oxygen, oxygen (O2), creating toxic, Euxinia, euxinic (anoxic waters, anoxic and wikt:sulfidic, sulfidic) waters. Although anoxic events have no ...
(OAE) that occurred around 111 million years ago (Ma), in the
Albian The Albian is both an age (geology), age of the geologic timescale and a stage (stratigraphy), stage in the stratigraphic column. It is the youngest or uppermost subdivision of the Early Cretaceous, Early/Lower Cretaceous epoch (geology), Epoch/s ...
geologic
stage Stage, stages, or staging may refer to: Arts and media Acting * Stage (theatre), a space for the performance of theatrical productions * Theatre, a branch of the performing arts, often referred to as "the stage" * ''The Stage'', a weekly Brit ...
, during a climatic interval of Earth's history known as the Middle Cretaceous Hothouse (MKH).


Timeline

OAE1b had three main subevents: the Kilian, Paquier, and Leenhardt. The Kilian subevent was defined by a negative ''δ''13C excursion from about 2-2.5% to 0.5-1.5% followed by a gradual ''δ''13C rise in the
Atlantic Ocean The Atlantic Ocean is the second largest of the world's five borders of the oceans, oceanic divisions, with an area of about . It covers approximately 17% of Earth#Surface, Earth's surface and about 24% of its water surface area. During the ...
, though the magnitude of these carbon isotope fluctuations was higher in areas like the Basque-Cantabrian Basin. The Paquier subevent was the most extreme subevent of OAE1b, exhibiting a ''δ''13C drop of ~3% in marine organic matter and of 1.5-2% in marine carbonate, which was succeeded by a gradual positive ''δ''13C excursion. The Leenhardt subevent was the last OAE1b subevent and is associated in the eastern
Tethys Ocean The Tethys Ocean ( ; ), also called the Tethys Sea or the Neo-Tethys, was a prehistoric ocean during much of the Mesozoic Era and early-mid Cenozoic Era. It was the predecessor to the modern Indian Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Eurasia ...
with a negative ''δ''13C excursion of 0.09‰ to -0.48‰ followed by a positive ''δ''13C excursion to 0.58%, although the magnitude of the carbon isotope shifts varies considerably in other marine regions, the negative ''δ''13C excursion being around 1% in the Atlantic and western Tethys but ~4% in the Basque-Cantabrian Basin and ~3% in the Andean Basin.


Causes

Pulsed
volcanic activity Volcanism, vulcanism, volcanicity, or volcanic activity is the phenomenon where solids, liquids, gases, and their mixtures erupt to the surface of a solid-surface astronomical body such as a planet or a moon. It is caused by the presence of a he ...
of the
Kerguelen Plateau The Kerguelen Plateau (, ), also known as the Kerguelen–Heard Plateau, is an oceanic plateau and large igneous province (LIP) located on the Antarctic Plate, in the southern Indian Ocean. It is about to the southwest of Australia and is near ...
is suggested to be the cause of OAE1b based on mercury anomalies recorded from this interval. Five different mercury anomalies relative to total organic carbon are known from strata from the Jiuquan Basin spanning the OAE1b interval, strongly supporting a causal relationship with massive volcanism. Prominent negative
osmium Osmium () is a chemical element; it has Symbol (chemistry), symbol Os and atomic number 76. It is a hard, brittle, bluish-white transition metal in the platinum group that is found as a Abundance of elements in Earth's crust, trace element in a ...
isotope excursions coeval with biotic changes among planktonic foraminifera further confirm the occurrence of multiple episodes of submarine volcanic activity over the course of OAE1b. Nonetheless, volcanism is not unequivocally supported as OAE1b's mainspring. Mercury anomalies associated with OAE1b have been interpreted by some to reflect mineralisation associated with salt
diapirism A diapir (; , ) is a type of intrusion in which a more mobile and ductilely deformable material is forced into brittle overlying rocks. Depending on the tectonic environment, diapirs can range from idealized mushroom-shaped Rayleigh–Taylor ...
instead of volcanism. Another line of evidence contradicting the volcanism hypothesis involves the massive diachrony between thallium isotope records and intervals of deoxygenation. Global warming intensified chemical weathering, leading to increased terrestrial inputs of organic matter into oceans and lakes. This promoted
eutrophication Eutrophication is a general term describing a process in which nutrients accumulate in a body of water, resulting in an increased growth of organisms that may deplete the oxygen in the water; ie. the process of too many plants growing on the s ...
that rapidly depleted bodies of water of dissolved oxygen. A contemporary increase in 187Os/188Os reflects an increase in continentally derived,
radiogenic A radiogenic nuclide is a nuclide that is produced by a process of radioactive decay. It may itself be radioactive (a radionuclide) or stable (a stable nuclide). Radiogenic nuclides (more commonly referred to as radiogenic isotopes) form some of ...
osmium Osmium () is a chemical element; it has Symbol (chemistry), symbol Os and atomic number 76. It is a hard, brittle, bluish-white transition metal in the platinum group that is found as a Abundance of elements in Earth's crust, trace element in a ...
sources in the ocean, confirming an increase in terrestrial runoff. Alternatively, rather than volcanism, some research points to orbital cycles as the governing cause of OAE1b. It has been hypothesised that enhanced monsoonal activity modulated by Earth's
axial precession In astronomy, axial precession is a gravity-induced, slow, and continuous change in the orientation of an astronomical body's rotational axis. In the absence of precession, the astronomical body's orbit would show axial parallelism. In parti ...
drove the development of OAE1b. Evidence supporting this explanation includes regular variations in detrital and weathering indices between humid intervals of high weathering and anoxia and drier intervals of decreased weathering and better oxygenated waters; these variations are suggested to correspond to precession cycles. A different analysis of orbital forcing purports the long eccentricity cycle as the most significant orbital driver of monsoonal modulation. δ18O records in planktic foraminifera from the Boreal Ocean show a 100
kyr A year is a unit of time based on how long it takes the Earth to orbit the Sun. In scientific use, the tropical year (approximately 365 solar days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, 45 seconds) and the sidereal year (about 20 minutes longer) are more exa ...
periodicity, indicating that the short eccentricity cycle governed the ingression of hot Tethyan waters into the Boreal Ocean and consequent Boreal warming. The 405 kyr eccentricity cycle appears to have dominated the advance and retreat of anoxia in the Vocontian Basin. The tectonic isolation of the Atlantic and Tethys Oceans restricted their ventilation, enabling their stagnation and facilitating ideal conditions for thermohaline stratification, which would in turn promote the widespread development of anoxia during a speedily warming climate. OAE1b's coincidence with a peak in a 5-6 Myr oscillation in marine phosphorus accumulation suggests that enhanced phosphorus regeneration may have been one of the causal factors behind the development of widespread anoxia. As more phosphorus built up in marine environments and caused spikes in biological productivity and decreases in dissolved oxygen, it caused a strong positive feedback loop in which phosphorus deposited on the seafloor was recycled back into the water column at faster rates, facilitating further increase in productivity and decrease in seawater oxygen content. Eventually, a
negative feedback Negative feedback (or balancing feedback) occurs when some function (Mathematics), function of the output of a system, process, or mechanism is feedback, fed back in a manner that tends to reduce the fluctuations in the output, whether caused ...
loop of increased atmospheric oxygen terminated this phosphorus spike and the OAE itself by causing increased wildfire activity and a consequent decline in vegetation and chemical weathering.


Effects

Unlike other OAEs during the MKH, such as the OAE1a and the OAE2, OAE1b was not associated with an extinction event of benthic foraminifera. Identical benthic foraminiferal assemblages occur both below and above the black shales deposited in association with OAE1b, indicating that this OAE was limited in its geographic and bathymetric extent. Although some parts of the ocean floor became devoid of life, benthic foraminifera survived in refugia and recolonised previously abandoned areas after the OAE with no faunal turnover. Planktonic foraminifera, however, significantly declined during OAE1b. In the eastern Pacific, the Paquier Level of OAE1b is associated with the demise of heterozoan-dominated carbonate production. As with other OAEs, OAE1b left its mark on the geologic record in the form of widespread and abundant deposition of black shales.


See also

* Jenkyns Event * Selli Event *
Breistroffer Event The Breistroffer Event (OAE1d) was an oceanic anoxic event (OAE) that occurred during the middle Cretaceous period, specifically in the latest Albian, around 101 million years ago (Ma). Causes A rise in carbon dioxide and consequent negative carbo ...
* Bonarelli Event


References

Albian Stage Anoxic events {{improve categories, date=June 2023