Abrupt Climatic Change during the Latest Maastrichtian: Establishing
Robust Temporal Links with the Onset of Deccan Volcanism and K/Pg Mass
Extinction
Abstract
A transient period of climate change, characterized by a global warming
of ~2.5–5°C followed by a cooling to pre-excursion
conditions, occurred during the last 300 kyr of the Maastrichtian
(~66.34–66.02 Ma). This instability may have played a
role in destabilizing marine and terrestrial ecosystems, priming the
system for abrupt extinction at the K-Pg boundary, likely triggered by a
large bolide impact. This pre-K-Pg warming event has often been linked
to the main phase of Deccan Trap volcanism, however large uncertainties
associated with radio-isotopic dating methods of basalts, along with low
sedimentation rates and hiatuses in many studied sedimentary sequences,
have long hampered a definitive correlation. To complement recent
advances in dating of the traps, we have generated the first complete
and highest resolution (2.5–4 kyr) benthic stable δ13C and δ18O record
for the final million years of the Maastrichtian using the epifaunal
foraminifera species Nuttallides truempyi from ODP Site 1262, Walvis
Ridge, South Atlantic, calibrated to an updated orbitally-tuned age
model. We then compare our data to other previously published
geochemical data from other sites in the high, middle, and low
latitudes. Our data confirms that the onset of the warming event
coincides with the onset of the main phase of Deccan volcanism, strongly
suggesting a causal link. Furthermore, spectral analysis of our extended
late Maastrichtian-Early Eocene record suggests that the onset of the
warming event corresponds to a 405-kyr eccentricity minima, in contrast
to many transient warming events (hyperthermals) of the Paleogene,
suggesting a control by orbital forcing alone is unlikely. A peculiar
feature of the event, compared to other hyperthermals, is a muted carbon
cycle response during warming, which may be related to the comparatively
heavier δ13C signature of volcanogenic CO2 (–7‰), compared to other
sources of light carbon invoked to explain Paleogene hyperthermals. The
warming event coincided with minor extinctions of thermocline-dwelling
foraminifera, along with dwarfing and blooms of the opportunistic
disaster genera Guembelitria, suggesting that Deccan-induced climatic
instability may have played a role in priming high-stress ecosystems
which were tipped over a threshold into mass extinction during bolide
impact.