Empirical evidence for a stable 405 kiloyear Jupiter-Venus eccentricity
climate cycle as a framework for an accurate chronostratigraphy for the
Mesozoic and Cenozoic
Abstract
A precise and accurate timescale is critical for calibrating major
events in Earth history and testing their spatiotemporal relationships
for putative causes. The Newark-Hartford astrochronostratigraphic
polarity timescale (APTS) was developed in cyclical lacustrine
continental deposits spanning 27 million years of Late Triassic and
earliest Jurassic time using the theoretically constant 405 kyr
eccentricity cycle linked to gravitational interactions with
Jupiter-Venus as a tuning target and provides a major calibration for
the early Mesozoic. While this cycle is both unimodal and the most
metronomic of the major orbital cycles thought to pace Earth’s climate
in numerical solutions, there has been no empirical confirmation of that
behavior, given the potential chaotic behavior of the Solar System. An
additional criticism of the Newark-Hartford APTS is that it is anchored
only at its younger end by U-Pb zircon dates at 201.6 Ma. To test the
validity of the dangling APTS and orbital periodicities, we recovered a
diagnostic magnetic polarity sequence providing an unambiguous
correlation to the APTS in the volcaniclastic-bearing Chinle Formation
in drill core PFNP-1A from Petrified Forest National Park (Arizona, US).
New U-Pb CA-TIMS detrital zircon dates from the core are
indistinguishable from ages predicted by the APTS back to 215 Ma. The
APTS is evidently continuous to a small fraction of a remarkably
constant 405 kyr orbital eccentricity cycle, thus extending the
empirical evidence well beyond theoretical solutions regarded as
reliable back to only 50 Ma. The Newark-Hartford APTS becomes the
longest directly calibrated polarity sequence and can be used to resolve
various Earth history problems, for example, to differentiate
provinciality from global temporal patterns in the ecological rise of
early dinosaurs.