posted on 2023-07-08, 15:03authored byEva E. Stüeken, Sebastian Viehmann, Simon V. Hohl
Various geochemical
proxies have been developed to determine
if
ancient sedimentary strata were deposited in marine or nonmarine environments.
A critical parameter for proxy reliability is the residence time of
aqueous species in seawater, which is rarely considered for proxies
relying on stable isotopes and elemental abundance ratios. Differences
in residence time may affect our ability to track geologically short-lived
alternations between marine and nonmarine conditions. To test this
effect for sulfur and nitrogen isotopes and sulfur/carbon ratios,
we investigated a stratigraphic section in the Miocene Oberpullendorf
Basin in Austria. Here, previous work revealed typical seawater-like
rare earth element and yttrium (REY) systematics transitioning to
nonmarine-like systematics. This shift was interpreted as a brief
transition from an open marine depositional setting to a restricted
embayment with a reduced level of exchange with the open ocean and
possibly freshwater influence. Our isotopic results show no discernible
response in carbonate-associated sulfate sulfur isotopes and carbon/sulfur
abundance ratios during the interval of marine restriction inferred
from the REY data, but nitrogen isotopes show a decrease by several
permil. This observation is consistent with the much longer residence
time of sulfate in seawater compared with REY and nitrate. Hence,
this case study illustrates that the residence time is a key factor
for the utility of seawater proxies. In some cases, it may make geochemical
parameters more sensitive to marine water influx than paleontological
observations, as in the Oberpullendorf Basin. Particular care is warranted
in deep time, when marine residence times likely differ markedly from
the modern.