Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Abstract:
Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) are routinely used as proxies for wildfire in geological sediments
associated with large igneous province (LIP) driven CO2 increases and mass extinction events. One example is the
end-Triassic mass extinction event (ETE) driven by Earth's most laterally extensive LIP, the Central Atlantic
Magmatic Province (CAMP). However, many PAH records often lack critical information including identifying
specific source(s) of PAHs (e.g., pyrogenic vs. petrogenic), intensity of paleowildfire events, whether PAHs
represent predominant smoke signals that can travel substantial distance from the burn origin, and if evidence of
PAH as markers for soil erosion exists. To better understand ETE wildfire events, a detailed evaluation of PAH
distributions from the Italcementi section in the Lombardy Basin, Italy covering the latest Rhaetian was undertaken. We report the best evidence of wildfire activity occurs above the initial carbon isotope excursion (CIE)
which is routinely used to chemostratigraphically correlate between ETE sections, rather than within the initial
CIE as evidenced at other sections. This wildfire event was intense, short-lived, and occurred during a calcification crisis and delta13Corg anomaly, thereby linking terrestrial and marine ecosystem stress. Evidence of a more
prolonged but less intense wildfire event and/or evidence for smoke signals takes place above this interval before
the onset of a second calcification crisis. By comparing PAH records from Italy, Greenland, Poland, the UK, and
China, during the ETE, few sections show evidence for intense (i.e., higher-temperature) wildfire activity during
the initial CIE. However, these investigated PAH records show prolonged increases in the low-molecular-weight
(LMW) combustion-derived PAH phenanthrene. We interpret this to represent widespread (and possibly more
intense) wildfire activity further from the deposition sites, since LMW combustion-derived PAHs are the major
PAHs in smoke aerosols that can travel vast distances, and/or less intense wildfire activity that characteristically
produce LMW combustion-derived PAHs. In comparing PAH data, we find widespread wildfire activity across
multiple basins supporting wildfire activity was an important ecological stressor in the terrestrial realm during
the ETE.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; end-Triassic; mass extinction; Central Atlantic Magmatic Province; wildfire;soil erosion
Elenco autori:
Rigo, Manuel
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