Sea-level, humidity, and land-erosion records across the initial Eocene thermal maximum from a continental-marine transect in northern Spain
- 1Department of Earth Science, MS 126, Rice University, P.O. Box 1892, Houston, Texas 77251, USA, and Marine Geology, Earth Sciences Center, Box 460, SE-40530, Göteborg, Sweden
- 2Departamento de Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Facultad de Ciencias, Basque Country University, Ap. 644, 48080 Bilbao, Spain
Abstract
In two continental sections in the Tremp basin, northern Spain, the initial Eocene thermal maximum (also known as the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum) is registered by an ∼6‰ fall in δ13C values in soil carbonate nodules. High-resolution correlations, using the δ13C excursion, can be made to nearby shelf and bathyal marine settings, allowing a detailed reconstruction of soil formation on land and transport of detritus to the sea during the initial Eocene thermal maximum. Soils that formed before and after the initial Eocene thermal maximum in the Tremp region reflect arid to semiarid conditions, with abundant evaporative minerals, whereas initial Eocene thermal maximum soils reflect seasonally wetter but generally dry conditions. During the initial Eocene thermal maximum, land erosion was intensified and accumulation rates of terrigenous detritus in the sea increased. This reflects both increased topographic relief associated with a prominent sea-level lowstand and enhanced seasonal precipitation over a dry landscape with sparse vegetation. Deeper erosion led to an increase in the flux of kaolinite from buried Mesozoic soils to the oceans. The association of the initial Eocene thermal maximum with a sea-level lowstand in northern Spain, as well as at other marginal North Atlantic sites, may reflect coeval large-scale magmatic activity in the northernmost Atlantic.
Footnotes
-
This event is also referred to in the literature as the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum. We follow the recommendation of the International Subcommission on Paleogene Stratigraphy to use initial Eocene thermal maximum.
-
- Accepted April 25, 2003.
- Received January 23, 2003.
- Revision received April 25, 2003.
- Geological Society of America












