The quest for chron E23r at Partridge Island, bay of Fundy, Canada: CAMP emplacement postdates the end-Triassic extinction event at the North American craton
Publication date
2011
Authors
Deenen, M.H.L.
Krijgsman, W.
Ruhl, M.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
The Partridge Island stratigraphic section at the Bay of Fundy, Maritime Canada, reveals a continental sedimentary
succession with the end-Triassic mass extinction level closely followed by basalts of the Central Atlantic Magmatic
Province (CAMP). New Paleomagnetic data show that a short reverse magnetic polarity chron, correlative to E23r of the
Newark Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale (GPTS), is present below the extinction event. Organic carbon isotope data and
basalt geochemistry further indicate that the onset of CAMP emplacement in the Bay of Fundy was roughly synchronous
with emplacement in the Newark basin, but slightly postdates the oldest CAMP volcanism in Morocco by ∼20 ka. These results
confirm the potential for long-distance CAMP correlations based on geochemical trace elements, indicate substantiate
provincialism of latest Triassic palynoflora, and suggest a very concise period (<<100 ka) of CAMP emplacement in the
northern Atlantic region.