STABLE CARBON ISOTOPE CHEMOSTRATIGRAPHY OF THE BASE OF THE CALLOVIAN IN GREENLAND
Stable carbon isotope chemostratigraphy and event stratigraphy are now essential tools for aiding in the definition of GSSPs. In this study, stable carbon isotopic analysis of 91 samples from east Greenland’s Middle Jurassic shallow marine sandstones of the Pelion Formation (Store Koldewey and Hold with Hope) and correlative and well-dated offshore siltstones and mudstones of the Fossilbjerget Formation (Jameson Land) is used to discriminate several isotopic events previously observed in other European basins and propose the early Callovian (δ13CTOC) positive carbon isotopic excursion as a secondary marker for defining the Callovian GSSP.
The early Callovian (δ13CTOC) positive carbon isotopic excursion is a fundamental tool for superregional correlation between candidate GSSPs and Standard Auxiliary Boundary Stratotypes. It can also help establish a chronological order (synchronous vs diachronous) of index species occurrences between different locations.