GSA Connects 2024 Meeting in Anaheim, California

Paper No. 89-6
Presentation Time: 9:30 AM

REDUCED CO2 RELEASE FROM THE CHICXULUB IMPACT EVENT AS INFERRED FROM CARBONATE CLUMPED ISOTOPE THERMOMETRY ON CRATER IMPACTITES


KASKES, Pim1, MARCHEGIANO, Marta2, PERAL, Marion3, GODERIS, Steven4, MATTIELLI, Nadine5 and CLAEYS, Philippe4, (1)Laboratoire G-Time, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Avenue F.D. Roosevelt 50, Brussels, 1050, Belgium; Archaeology, Environmental Changes & Geo-Chemistry (AMGC), Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, Brussels, 1050, Belgium, (2)Archaeology, Environmental Changes & Geo-Chemistry (AMGC), Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, Brussels, 1050, Belgium; Department of Stratigraphy and Paleontology, University of Granada, Granada, 18071, Spain, (3)UMR CNRS 5805 EPOC - OASU, Université de Bordeaux, PESSAC CEDEX, 33615, France; Archaeology, Environmental Changes & Geo-Chemistry (AMGC), Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, Brussels, 1050, Belgium, (4)Archaeology, Environmental Changes & Geo-Chemistry (AMGC), Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, Brussels, 1050, Belgium, (5)Laboratoire G-Time, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Avenue F.D. Roosevelt 50, Brussels, 1050, Belgium

The ~200 km wide Chicxulub impact structure in Yucatán, México, formed by a hypervelocity impact event ~66 Myr ago, constitutes an ideal natural laboratory to apply carbonate clumped isotope thermometry on lithologies deep within an impact crater. The target stratigraphy at Chicxulub consists of a ~3 km thick Mesozoic carbonate-evaporite platform, and carbonates are present as clasts, fine-grained matrix particles, and secondary precipitates in impact melt-bearing breccias (suevites) and impact melt rock. However, the role of these carbonates in the cratering processes, such as shock-melting, devolatilization, and post-impact carbon cycle perturbations, remain poorly constrained. Hence, this study presents the first clumped-isotope (Δ47) analysis on drill cores from a transect throughout the Chicxulub crater that preserve hot signatures of impact-related thermodynamic processes. The clumped isotope dataset is supplemented by conventional isotope analysis (δ18O and δ13C) and high-resolution petrography.

Three scenarios are introduced to explain the high temperatures. 1) Outside the Chicxulub crater, the proximal ejecta blanket shows traces of thermal processing of carbonate material during ejection (>100°C). 2) Within the crater the influence of a widespread hydrothermal system is determined in all lithologies (>35.5°C) except post-impact sediments. 3) Superimposed on a burial diagenetic and a hydrothermal overprint, highly elevated temperatures (up to 327 ± 33°C) in lower suevites and impact melt rocks are measured in microcrystalline calcite phases. This calcite resembles microcrystalline petrographic features produced by laser-melting experiments on limestones. We interpret that these features likely formed by impact-induced decarbonation and rapid back-reaction, in which highly reactive CaO recombines with impact-released CO2 to form secondary CaCO3 phases.

Our dataset provides the first physical and chemical evidence for back-reactions deep within the Chicxulub impact structure. This has important climatic implications for the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction event, as current numerical models likely overestimate CO2-release from the Chicxulub impact, potentially up to a factor of ~60%. Therefore, the recombination effect to form secondary CaCO3 phases needs to be accounted for in these paleoclimate models.