The Permian-Triassic boundary (PTB) crisis caused major shortterm perturbations in ocean chemistry, as recorded by the precipitation of anachronistic carbonates. Here, we document for the first time a global dolomitization event during the Permian-Triassic transition based on Mg/(Mg + Ca) data from 22 sections with a global distribution representing shallow- to deep-marine environments. Ten of these sections show high Mg/(Mg + Ca) ratios bracketing the PTB, recording a short-term spike in dolomite formation. The dolomite consists mainly of micron-scale anhedral to subhedral crystals that are associated with abundant fossilized bacterial bodies and extracellular polymeric substances, suggesting that dolomite precipitation was induced by microbial metabolic activity. Sections showing a dolomite spike at the PTB are widely distributed geographically, but mostly encountered in mid-shelf to upper-slope settings. Because the dolomitization event coincided with a rapid expansion of oceanic anoxia and high rates of sulfate reduction, we hypothesize that it was triggered by enhanced microbial sulfate reduction within the oceanic chemocline.
CITATION STYLE
Li, M., Song, H., Algeo, T. J., Wignall, P. B., Dai, X., & Woods, A. D. (2018). A dolomitization event at the oceanic chemocline during the Permian-Triassic transition. Geology, 46(12), 1043–1046. https://doi.org/10.1130/G45479.1
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