Exploring the impact of Cenomanian paleogeography and marine gateways on
oceanic oxygen
Abstract
The Cenomanian-Turonian period recorded one of the largest disruptions
to the oxygen and carbon cycles, the Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE2, 94
Ma). This event is global, yet paleo-reconstructions document
heterogeneous ocean oxygenation states and sedimentary carbon contents,
both temporally and spatially, suggesting that several mechanisms are at
play. To better understand the long-term controls on oceanic oxygen and
the initial oxygenation conditions prevailing at the beginning of OAE2,
we perform numerical simulations of the Cenomanian using the IPSCL-CM5A2
Earth System Model, which includes a marine biogeochemistry component.
We examine the control of the biogeochemical states of the global and
Central Atlantic oceans by the depth of the Central American Seaway
(CAS). The simulations show that a vigorous ocean circulation existed
during the Cenomanian and that dysoxia/anoxia was caused by
paleogeography rather than by ocean stagnation. The existence of
restricted basins, disconnected from the deep global circulation and
supplied with oxygen-depleted waters from Oxygen Minimum Zones of the
surrounding basins, played a key role in the development of
dysoxic/anoxic regions. A comparison with redox-proxy data suggests that
a deep connection existed between the Pacific and Central Atlantic prior
to OAE2. A shallowing of the CAS may have contributed to the
establishment of enhanced anoxia in the Central Atlantic during OAE2.
The paleogeographic configuration and that of gateways and submarine
topographic barriers appear as major long-term controllers of the
oceanic circulation and oxygen distribution, leading to low-oxygen
concentrations in extended parts of the ocean as prerequisite conditions
for OAEs to occur.