Using Nd Isotopes to Evaluate Continental Weathering
Flux in Carbonate-Dominated Marine Systems of the Southwestern U.S.
Mixed carbonate-siliciclastic marine successions provide a
unique window to evaluate input from two different source
areas—siliciclastics record continental weathering
flux and marine
currents whereas interbedded carbonates record changes in ambient seawater conditions
and paleoecology. In marine successions composed entirely of carbonates, the
terrestrial signal is lacking?? making the record of continental
weathering
flux difficult to evaluate.
We are using Nd-isotope ratios in cyclic marine carbonates as a proxy for continental
weathering
flux in deposits lacking significant marine siliciclastics, as well
as a proxy for biolimiting nutrient flux which ultimately controls
phytoplankton (and potential hydrocarbon) production. We use Nd-isotope ratios
because the residence time of Nd in the ocean is less than the mixing time of
the ocean, the marine Nd budget is dominated by continental flux, and once
incorporated into the sediment Nd is diagenetically stable.
This study focuses on 3 separate, but coeval cyclic
Middle Pennsylvanian successions in Arizona and Nevada. We sampled for Nd
isotopes within a glacial-interglacial cycle context to understand the
relationships between orbital-scale glacio-eustasy and continental weathering
flux. These U.S. Southwest successions were chosen because orbital cycles are
well developed and the siliciclastics were sourced from the Ancestral Rocky
Mountains which have relatively well constrained and uniformly low Nd-isotope
ratio values. The study sites represent deposition across ~20° of paleolatitude
which likely captures a range of paleoclimate regimes. Preliminary Nd-isotope
data from the cycles indicates primary Pennsylvanian marine values are
preserved in the deposits and record measurable shifts that fluctuate with sea
level. This relationship could provide insights into the timing and degree of siliciclastics into a marine environment within a cyclostratigraphic framework.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90142 © 2012 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, April 22-25, 2012, Long Beach, California