Major perturbation in sulfur cycling at the Triassic-Jurassic boundary

  1. Kenneth H. Williford1,*,
  2. Julien Foriel1,
  3. Peter D. Ward1 and
  4. Eric J. Steig1
  1. University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA
    • *Current address: Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Australia; E-mail: k.williford{at}curtin.edu.au.

    Abstract

    Stable sulfur isotopes from the reduced sulfur fraction of Late Triassic–Early Jurassic marine sediments at Kennecott Point in British Columbia, Canada, show evidence for a major perturbation in sulfur cycling coincident with a major carbon cycle perturbation in the wake of a mass extinction event at the Triassic-Jurassic boundary. The δ34S of reduced sulfur shifts from values consistent with open system bacterial sulfate reduction (−30‰) to values higher than any previously reported for Early Jurassic sulfates (20‰) and consistent with complete utilization of sulfate and Rayleigh fractionation in a closed system. We suggest that this isotopic shift was initiated by declining seawater sulfate concentration due to evaporite deposition in nascent Atlantic rift zones and enhanced by a local mechanism, such as a decoupling of the zone of sulfate reduction from the sulfate supply due to a catastrophic increase in the flux of land-derived sediments reaching the sea in the wake of massive terrestrial plant die-off during the Triassic–Jurassic mass extinction.

      • Received 21 January 2009.
      • Revision received 9 April 2009.
      • Accepted 28 April 2009.
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