A 9 million-year-long astrochronological record of the early- middle Eocene corroborated by seafloor spreading rates

Publication date

2018-03-01

Authors

Francescone, Federica
Lauretano, V.ISNI 0000000506790063
Bouligand, Claire
Moretti, Matteo
Sabatino, Nadia
Schrader, CindyISNI 000000049329991X
Catanzariti, Rita
Hilgen, FritsORCID 0000-0002-5683-259XISNI 0000000385598525
Lanci, Luca
Turtu, AntonioISNI 000000050745028X

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

The early-middle Eocene (ca. 56-41 Ma) is recorded in the pelagic Scaglia Rossa and Variegata Formations of the Umbria-Marche Basin (central Italy). Geochemical and magnetostratigraphic alignment between the Bottaccione section (Gubbio, central Italy) and the Smirra core (Cagli, central Italy) allows us to generate a continuous and wellpreserved new record that, combined with previously published data from the same area, creates a continuous high-resolution record from the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (ca. 56 Ma) to the lower part of chron C21n. Comparison with carbon isotope records from Ocean Drilling Program Sites 1258 and 1263 reveals a satisfactory match, providing further evidence of the global significance of the long-term trend and superposed perturbations captured by the δ13C records. The identification of astronomically forced geochemical cycles allows us to develop a 405 k.y. tuned age model, thereby extending the astrochronology from ca. 56.0 to ca. 47.5 Ma. Marine magnetic anomaly profiles from major oceanic basins characterized by high seafloor spreading rates were used to independently test the astronomical polarity time scale associated with our tuning, as well as other polarity time scales. Our age model suggests the existence of periods of relatively constant seafloor spreading rates separated by rapid changes, while the other time scales generate more gradual variations and also include large and short-term deviations in spreading rates that occur simultaneously in different oceanic basins, implying errors in polarity reversal ages. The Umbria- Marche age model further contributes to the closure of the middle Eocene gap in the astronomical time scale.

Keywords

Taverne, Geology

Citation

Francescone, F, Lauretano, V, Bouligand, C, Moretti, M, Sabatino, N, Schrader, C, Catanzariti, R, Hilgen, F, Lanci, L, Turtù, A, Sprovieri, M, Lourens, L & Galeotti, S 2018, 'A 9 million-year-long astrochronological record of the early- middle Eocene corroborated by seafloor spreading rates', Geological Society of America Bulletin, vol. 131, no. 3-4, pp. 499-520. https://doi.org/10.1130/B32050.1