INVESTIGATING LINKS BETWEEN CLIMATE AND NUTRIENT CYCLING IN THE EARLY PERMIAN: AN INTEGRATED STUDY OF NEW INORGANIC AND STABLE ISOTOPE DATA FROM THE MIDLAND BASIN OF WEST TEXAS
These observations are coupled with significant shifts of inorganic geochemistry, which reflects the varied influence of sediment provenance and paleoenvironmental conditions. A nested hierarchy of patterns in the data are interpreted as the cyclic variation induced by sea-level and climate. Superimposed on this is an overall upward-decline in the abundance of redox sensitive trace elements (e. g. Cu, Ni, Zn) commonly associated with organic matter and seafloor anoxia.
We interpret these trends as the signal of transition from cool, dynamic climates of the late Pennsylvanian to warmer greenhouse-type conditions that prevailed in the middle to late Permian. Positive δ13C excursions in the lower section are interpreted as organic carbon burial events, with a probable influence of meteoric diagenesis, particularly during times of lowstand. Low and relatively stable δ13C values through the Dean and Spraberry, coupled with high δ15N suggest nitrate limitation, a possible signal of poorly circulated seas and stable climates.