Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4701282 | Chemical Geology | 2006 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
By comparing geochemical records from the reference Bottaccione section (central Italy) with those previously obtained for the coeval Calabianca section (northwestern Sicily), different degrees of oceanic anoxia were delineated and ascribed to different abundance and type (degradable or refractory) of organic matter, which are limiting factors in the bacterial sulphate reduction reactions and in subsequent euxinic conditions at seafloor in the Tethys realm. Based on a ciclostratigraphic approach, consistent fluctuations at 100 ky scale in the chemostratigraphic signals from the two sections are inferred to be expression of a strong orbital-climatic forcing driving changes in the oceanic environment during the BL deposition.
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Authors
Giovanna Scopelliti, Adriana Bellanca, Rodolfo Neri, Francois Baudin, Rodolfo Coccioni,