Publication details

Sea-level changes vs. organic productivity as controls on Early and Middle Devonian bioevents: Facies- and gamma-ray based sequence-stratigraphic correlation of the Prague Basin, Czech Republic

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Authors

BÁBEK Ondřej FAMĚRA Martin ŠIMÍČEK Daniel WEINEROVÁ Hedvika HLADIL Jindřich KALVODA Jiří

Year of publication 2018
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Global and Planetary Change
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818117303089
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2017.11.009
Keywords Devonian; Carbonates; Sequence stratigraphy; Bioevents; Eustatic cyclicity; Palaeoclimatology
Description The Devonian marine stratigraphic record is characterized by a number of bioevents overturns in pelagic and benthic faunal assemblages, which are associated with distinct changes in lithology. The coincidence of litho logic and biotic changes can be explained by the causal link between biotic evolution, carbonate production and relative sea-level changes. To gain insight into the sea-level history of Early and Middle Devonian bioevents (the Lochkovian/Pragian Event, Basal Zlichovian E., Daleje E., and Chotec E.) we carried out a sequence-stratigraphic analysis of carbonate-dominated successions in the Prague Basin (peri-Gondwana), a classic area of Devonian bioevents. The study is based on a basin-wide correlation of facies and field gamma-ray spectrometry (GRS) logs from 18 sections (Lochkovian to Eifelian), supported by element geochemistry and published biostratigraphic and carbon isotope data. Devonian carbonate deposition in the Prague Basin alternated between two end member modes: an oligotrophic, homoclinal ramp (Praha and Daleje-Trebotov Formations) and a mesotrophic, distally steepened ramp (Lochkov, Zlichov, and Chotec Formations). They show contrasting facies, particularly the absence/presence of gravity-flow deposits, allochem composition, U/Th ratios, and geochemical composition (productivity proxies such as P/Al, Si/Al, Zn/Al, TOC and stable carbon isotopes). The mesotrophic systems reflect an increased availability of nutrients on the shelf during the late Lochkovian, early Emsian (Zlichovian), and Eifelian periods when sea surface temperature, pCO(2), and silicate weathering rates ware higher. The oligotrophic systems deposited during the Pragian to-earliest Emsian and late Emsian (Dalejan) periods reflect reversed palaeoclimatic trends. We identified three depositional sequences (DS), DS1 (base of Pragian to early Emsian); DS2 (early Emsian to mid Emsian); and DS3 (mid Emsian to mid Eifelian). These sequences were integrated into a peri-Gondwana relative sea-level curve, which was then compared with the Euramerican sea level curve of Johnson et al. (1985). The bioevents coincided with several sequence stratigraphic surfaces, representing variable limbs of the relative sea-level curve. On the other hand, their conspicuous coincidence with the switching intervals between the colder oligotrophic and warmer mesotrophic modes suggests that organic production linked to global climate was the primary control on biotic overturns, while sea-level fluctuations may have only amplified its effects.
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