Solid Earth Sciences (Dec 2019)

An extremely brief end Ordovician mass extinction linked to abrupt onset of glaciation

  • Ming-Xing Ling,
  • Ren-Bin Zhan,
  • Guang-Xu Wang,
  • Yi Wang,
  • Yuri Amelin,
  • Peng Tang,
  • Jian-Bo Liu,
  • Jisuo Jin,
  • Bing Huang,
  • Rong-Chang Wu,
  • Shuo Xue,
  • Bin Fu,
  • Vickie C. Bennett,
  • Xin Wei,
  • Xiao-Cong Luan,
  • Seth Finnegan,
  • David A.T. Harper,
  • Jia-Yu Rong

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. 190 – 198

Abstract

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The end Ordovician mass extinction (EOME) was the second most severe biotic crisis in Phanerozoic, and has been widely linked to a major glaciation. However, robust geochronology of this interval is still lacking. Here we present four successive high-precision zircon U–Pb dates by isotope dilution thermal ionization mass spectrometry (ID-TIMS) for biostratigraphically well-constrained K-bentonites of a continuous Ordovician-Silurian boundary section at Wanhe, SW China. They include 444.65 ± 0.22 Ma (middle Dicellograptus complexus Biozone), 444.06 ± 0.20 Ma (lower Paraorthograptus pacificus Biozone), 443.81 ± 0.24 Ma (upper Tangyagraptus typicus Subzone), and 442.99 ± 0.17 Ma (upper Metabolograptus extraordinarius Biozone). Calculations based on sedimentation rates suggest a duration of 0.47 ± 0.34 Ma for the Hirnantian Stage, which is much shorter than previously thought (1.4 ± 2.05 Ma in the International Chronostratigraphic Chart ver. 2019/05). The new data also constrain the Hirnantian glacial maximum to ∼0.2 Ma, supporting that its brevity and intensity probably triggered the EOME. Keywords: ID-TIMS, K-bentonite, End Ordovician mass extinction (EOME), Hirnantian stage