Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4677752 | Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2011 | 12 Pages |
The end of Permian time (252–251 Ma) hosts the largest mass extinction in Earth history, yet events heralding this global catastrophe remain intensely disputed. We present a chemostratigraphic marker, the 187Re/188Os ratio, which soars to unprecedented levels approaching the Permo-Triassic boundary. These ratios are tied to profound trace element changes and a precise Re–Os time record at 252 Ma preserved in black shales from East Greenland and the mid-Norwegian shelf. Within a 36-meter shale section, an 80-fold increase in Re concentrations (two-fold for Os) signals seawater conditions that became increasingly inhospitable to life. Unwavering initial 187Os/188Os ratios of 0.6 preclude mafic volcanism and meteorite impact as the direct cause of Late Permian anoxia. We argue that extraordinarily high 187Re/188Os ratios are the hallmark of simultaneously rising ocean temperature and acidity, leading to loss of oxygen and the stifling of life in latest Permian time.
► Shales from Greenland and mid-Norwegian shelf yield precise Late Permian Re–Os ages. ► Dramatic trace element changes upsection capture rapid development of severe anoxia. ► Unwavering initial Os ratios at ~ 0.6 acquit mafic volcanism as the cause of anoxia. ► 187Re/188Os ratios soar to unprecedented levels approaching the P–Tr boundary. ► High ocean temperature, acidity and anoxia together stifled Late Permian marine life.