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1 June 2011 Impact of the Evolution of Carbonate Ballasts on Marine Biogeochemistry in the Mesozoic and Associated Changes in Energy Delivery to Subsurface Waters
Yuichiro Kashiyama, Kazumi Ozaki, Eiichi Tajika
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Abstract

We have examined the impact of the Mesozoic algal revolution using biogeochemical simulations to analyze the energy flux into the subsurface environment. In particular, the delivery scheme of energy to the subsurface was dramatically altered by the appearance of mineralized exoskeletons, both in algal groups (e.g., coccolithophores) and in zooplanktic taxa. These biominerals, acting as ballast, accentuated the delivery of organic matter to subsurface waters. Thus, the elevated organic carbon flux associated with evolutionary developments in Mesozoic taxa caused an intense but short-lived oceanic euxinia, without an associated mass extinction event, in sharp contrast to the relatively prolonged Paleozoic euxinia that were generally coincident with mass extinctions.

© by the Palaeontological Society of Japan
Yuichiro Kashiyama, Kazumi Ozaki, and Eiichi Tajika "Impact of the Evolution of Carbonate Ballasts on Marine Biogeochemistry in the Mesozoic and Associated Changes in Energy Delivery to Subsurface Waters," Paleontological Research 15(2), 89-99, (1 June 2011). https://doi.org/10.2517/1342-8144-15.2.089
Received: 4 April 2011; Accepted: 1 June 2011; Published: 1 June 2011
KEYWORDS
anoxia
ballast hypothesis
biogeochemical models
euxinia
Mesozoic marine revolution
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