The Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary event in Ecuador: reduced biotic effects due to eastern boundary current setting

A multidisciplinary study of a new Cretaceous-Tertiary (K/T) boundary section near Guayaquil, Ecuador, reveals an unusually cool water, low diversity planktic foraminiferal fauna and a high diversity radiolarian fauna similar to those found in southern high-latitude K/T sequences despite the fact th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marine micropaleontology 1997-08, Vol.31 (3), p.97-133
Hauptverfasser: Keller, Gerta, Adatte, Thierry, Hollis, Chris, Ordóñez, Martha, Zambrano, Italo, Jiménez, Nelson, Stinnesbeck, Wolfgang, Aleman, Antinor, Hale-Erlich, Wendy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A multidisciplinary study of a new Cretaceous-Tertiary (K/T) boundary section near Guayaquil, Ecuador, reveals an unusually cool water, low diversity planktic foraminiferal fauna and a high diversity radiolarian fauna similar to those found in southern high-latitude K/T sequences despite the fact that this section was deposited near the Cretaceous equator. The K/T boundary is located by planktic foraminifera within a narrow interval bounded by last appearances of tropical Cretaceous species and first appearances of Tertiary species including Parvularugoglobigerina eugubina. As in southern high latitudes, there is no major mass extinction of either planktic foraminifera or radiolarians at this level. A major radiolarian faunal discontinuity occurs some 6 m higher in the section within foraminiferal Zone Plc, some 300–500 kyr after the K/T event. δ 13C values from bulk carbonates show both high- and low-latitude characteristics. Similarly to low latitudes, there is a 3%. negative δ 13C excursion at the K/T boundary which is generally interpreted as a major decrease in primary productivity. But unlike the low latitudes, recovery occurs within a few thousand years, as compared with 300–500 kyr, and suggests rapid nutrient influx from the Antarctic region via a current similar to the Humboldt current today. Similarly to high-latitude K/T sequences, a negative δ 13C shift occurs in the early Danian Zone Plb about 300 kyr after the K/T boundary. Sedimentologic and mineralogic data indicate a late Maastrichtian with relatively low biogenic quartz and high carbonate followed by increasing biogenic quartz (>50%) and decreasing carbonate (
ISSN:0377-8398
1872-6186
DOI:10.1016/S0377-8398(96)00061-8