Deep Sea Sediment Alteration Across the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum
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Deep Sea Sediment Alteration Across the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum

Abstract

Traces of past oceanic and environmental conditions are stored in deep sea sediments as ‘proxy records’. When these ‘proxy records’ are deciphered, they can contain valuable information that can be used to reconstruct past chemical and physical conditions of the ocean throughout time. Though, these records can be distorted by a variety of chemical, physical, and biological processes including bioturbation, dissolution, and variations in sedimentation rate, complicating the relationship between stratigraphic depth and age of a geochemical proxy, and making it more difficult to translate past climates and environments. As CO2 levels continue to rise in our atmosphere, an understanding of how past extreme warming events, such as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, ~55.9 Ma), impacted environmental conditions and ecosystem dynamics can better inform how our modern ocean ecosystems will react to anthropogenic warming. During the PETM, a rapid injection of isotopically light carbon into the ocean and/or atmosphere, indicated by a negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE), resulted in global warming, changes in ocean ecosystem dynamics including a severe benthic foraminifera extinction, and global dissolution of deep-sea carbonates due to shoaling of the calcite compensation depth (CCD). This subsequent dissolution erased the onset of the PETM CIE at many deep sea locations, while the impact on the deep sea macrobenthic community remains unexplored. In this dissertation I investigate the response of the deep sea benthic and infaunal macrofauna response to the PETM by quantifying bioturbation intensity utilizing the ichnofabric index (ii) by identifying and measuring trace fossil community change in 46 deep sea sediment cores. I find global decreases in trace fossil community size, with over half of the locations ceasing bioturbation following the onset of the PETM. I utilize a novel burrow-specific sampling technique to investigate the movement of bulk sediment within discrete trace fossils. I find the most significant impact on the geochemical record occurs in concurrence with the CIE. I utilize neodymium isotopes in the North Atlantic at IODP site U1403 to investigate circulation patterns and find no change from Southern dominated deep water formation throughout the PETM.

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