MONTANEZ, ISABEL, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA
ABSTRACT: Evolution of Permian Atmospheric pCO2 and Western Equatorial Pangean Climate: As Recorded by Paleosol Morphologic and Geochemical Proxies
The evolution of atmospheric pCO2 throughout Earth’s history has been
of increasing interest given the role pCO2 plays in biogeochemical cycling,
continental weathering, climate change, and evolutionary events. Several previous
geochemical models estimated the evolution of atmospheric pCO2 levels for the
Phanerozoic. The results of these models suggest notably low CO2 levels,
comparable to present-day values (345 ppm), existed during Permian-Carboniferous
glaciation. This pCO2 minimum
was followed by a rapid increase in atmospheric
pCO2 initiated sometime during the latter half of the Permian. Peak pCO2
levels (3 to 9-fold greater than early Permian
minimum
values) were reached during the
Middle to Late Triassic. This modeled increase in pCO2 levels during the
Permian implies that the greenhouse effect was a major, if not dominant, control on
climate during the latter half of the Permian. However, this hypothesized evolution of
Permian-Triassic atmospheric pCO2 levels remained relatively untested in the
geologic record until recently.
This lecture will present a newly defined record of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels
for the Permian estimated from the d13C values of
pedogenic carbonates, goethites, soil organic matter, charcoals, and reptile teeth from
four depositional basins in North America and Europe. This Permian pCO2 curve
suggests that the transition from Late Paleozoic minimum
pCO2 values to
greenhouse conditions occurred very early in the Early Permian, significantly earlier than
previously suggested. Moreover, the evolution of pCO2 throughout the Permian
was characterized by several rapid and large magnitude variations, including a second pCO2
minima in the Early Permian. Estimated peak pCO2 levels (~2000 to 2500 ppmv) in
the Early Permian coincide temporally with numerically modeled estimates of the timing of
the end of Late Paleozoic glaciation. This suggests that rapidly increasing CO2
levels in the Early Permian may have been a major factor in terminating Late Paleozoic
glaciation. The subsequent fall in pCO2 levels may record increased continental
weathering associated with deglaciation as well as uplift of Himalayan-scale, Alleghanian,
Ouachita, and Hercynian mountains in the Early Permian. Paleoatmospheric pCO2
levels increase to a second peak in the Middle Permian and then decline progressively
throughout the Late Permian. What processes brought on the rapid return to peak pCO2
levels in the Middle to earliest Late Permian remains to be investigated. Significantly,
the Permian-Triassic boundary occurs on the falling limb of the pCO2 curve,
which reaches
minimum
levels in the Early Triassic. Paleosol morphologies and the stable
isotope compositions of pedogenic clays (D and d18O
values) document significant changes in paleo-precipitation and atmospheric circulation
coincident with these fluctuations in latest Pennsylvanian through Permian atmospheric pCO2
.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90910©2000-2001 AAPG Distinguished Lectures