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Research ArticleArticles

Paleoredox and pyritization of soft-bodied fossils in the Ordovician Frankfort Shale of New York

Úna C. Farrell, Derek E. G. Briggs, Emma U. Hammarlund, Erik A. Sperling and Robert R. Gaines
American Journal of Science May 2013, 313 (5) 452-489; DOI: https://doi.org/10.2475/05.2013.02
Úna C. Farrell
* Department of Geology and Geophysics, Yale University, P.O. Box 208109, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8109, USA
** Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, USA;
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  • For correspondence: ufarrell@ku.edu ufarrell@ku.edu
Derek E. G. Briggs
* Department of Geology and Geophysics, Yale University, P.O. Box 208109, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8109, USA
*** Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA;
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  • For correspondence: derek.briggs@yale.edu
Emma U. Hammarlund
§ Nordic Center for Earth Evolution and Institute of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense C, Denmark;
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  • For correspondence: emma@biology.sdu.dk
Erik A. Sperling
§§ Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA;
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  • For correspondence: sperling@fas.harvard.edu
Robert R. Gaines
§§§ Geology Department, Pomona College, Claremont, California 91711, USA;
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  • For correspondence: Robert.Gaines@pomona.edu
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Abstract

Multiple beds in the Frankfort Shale (Upper Ordovician, New York State), including the original “Beecher's Trilobite Bed,” yield fossils with pyritized soft-tissues. A bed-by-bed geochemical and sedimentological analysis was carried out to test previous models of soft-tissue pyritization by investigating environmental, depositional and diagenetic conditions in beds with and without soft-tissue preservation. Highly-reactive iron (FeHR), total iron (FeT), δ34S, organic carbon and redox-sensitive trace elements were measured. In particular, the partitioning of highly-reactive iron between iron-carbonates (Fe-carb), iron-oxides (Fe-ox), magnetite (Fe-mag), and pyrite (FeP) was examined.

Overall, the multi-proxy sedimentary geochemical data suggest that the succession containing pyritized trilobite beds was deposited under a dysoxic water-column, in agreement with the paleontological data. The data do not exclude brief episodes of water-column anoxia characterized by a ferruginous rather than an euxinic state. However, the highest FeHR/FeT values and redox-sensitive trace element enrichments occur in siltstone portions of turbidite beds and in concretions, suggesting that subsequent diagenesis had a significant effect on the distribution of redox-sensitive elements in this succession. Moderately high FeHR/FeT and FeP/FeHR, low organic carbon, enriched δ34S, and the frequent presence of iron-rich carbonate concretions in beds with soft tissue preservation confirm that pyritization was favored where pore-waters were iron-dominated in sediments relatively poor in organic carbon.

  • Dysoxia
  • iron paleoredox proxy
  • Konservat Lagerstätte
  • taphonomy
  • trace elements
  • sulfur isotopes
  • distal turbidite
  • paleoenvironment
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American Journal of Science: 313 (5)
American Journal of Science
Vol. 313, Issue 5
1 May 2013
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Paleoredox and pyritization of soft-bodied fossils in the Ordovician Frankfort Shale of New York
Úna C. Farrell, Derek E. G. Briggs, Emma U. Hammarlund, Erik A. Sperling, Robert R. Gaines
American Journal of Science May 2013, 313 (5) 452-489; DOI: 10.2475/05.2013.02

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Paleoredox and pyritization of soft-bodied fossils in the Ordovician Frankfort Shale of New York
Úna C. Farrell, Derek E. G. Briggs, Emma U. Hammarlund, Erik A. Sperling, Robert R. Gaines
American Journal of Science May 2013, 313 (5) 452-489; DOI: 10.2475/05.2013.02
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Keywords

  • Dysoxia
  • iron paleoredox proxy
  • Konservat Lagerstätte
  • taphonomy
  • trace elements
  • sulfur isotopes
  • distal turbidite
  • paleoenvironment

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