The carbon-isotope shift at the Permian/ Triassic boundary in the southern Alps is gradual


Autoria(s): Magaritz M.; Bär R.; Baud A.; Holzer W.T.
Data(s)

1988

Resumo

Carbon isotope ratios in marine carbonate rocks have been shown to shift at some of the time boundaries associated with extinction events; for example, Cretaceous/Tertiary and Ordovician/ Silurian. The Permian/Triassic boundary, the greatest extinction event of the Phanerozoic, is also marked by a large d13C depletion. New carbon isotope results from sections in the southern Alps show that this depletion did not actually represent a single event, but was a complex change that spanned perhaps a million years during the late Permian and early Triassic. These results suggest that the Permian/Triassic (P/Tr) extinction may have been in part gradual and in part 'stepwise', but was not in any case a single catastrophic event.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_8F470B7DFC8C

isbn:0028-0836

doi:10.1038/331337a0

isiid:A1988L803200059

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Nature, vol. 331, pp. 337-339

Palavras-Chave #carbon isotope, P/T boundary, marine carbonates
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article