Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implications

Podolia is a classical Silurian area in the southwestern part of the Ukraine. Shallow to open shelf rocks cropping out there are usually, except for a few dolomitic horizons, highly fossiliferous and therefore the biostratigraphy of the region has a long successful history. The Ukrainian meeting of...

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Main Authors: Kaljo, Dimitri, Grytsenko, Volodymyr, Martma, Tõnu, Mõtus, Mari-Ann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Estonian Academy Publishers 2007-12-01
Series:Estonian Journal of Earth Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://kirj.ee/public/Estonian_Journal_of_Earth_Sciences/2007/issue_4/earth-2007-4-2.pdf
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spelling doaj-dbdef056656f42d6982800ebe221b8202020-11-25T01:11:50ZengEstonian Academy PublishersEstonian Journal of Earth Sciences1736-47282007-12-01564205220Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implicationsKaljo, DimitriGrytsenko, VolodymyrMartma, TõnuMõtus, Mari-AnnPodolia is a classical Silurian area in the southwestern part of the Ukraine. Shallow to open shelf rocks cropping out there are usually, except for a few dolomitic horizons, highly fossiliferous and therefore the biostratigraphy of the region has a long successful history. The Ukrainian meeting of the Subcommission on Silurian Stratigraphy of the International Union of Geological Sciences, held in 1983, became an important milestone. Tsegelnyuk et al. summarized different results and views in a field guide published for the meeting (The Silurian of Podolia. The Guide to Excursion. Naukova Dumka, Kiev, 1983) and introduced a practically new stratigraphical terminology, and in some parts of the section, also new age interpretation of the beds. For our paper carbon isotopes were studied in eight sections on the banks of the Dniester River and its tributaries, covering ca 80% of the Silurian succession (Pridoli excluded). Three positive δ13C excursions were identified. The first excursion in the Kitaigorod 30 section reaches its peak value of 4.0‰ in the very bottom of the Demshin Subformation. The second shift reaches the peak value of 4.3‰ in the middle of the Muksha Subformation. The third shift is the most prominent one identified in the Silurian of Podolia – δ13C values increase steadily through the Isakovtsy Subformation, reaching 6.9‰ in the top, and a slightly lower value of 6.6‰ occurs in the bottom of the Prigorodok Formation. In the “middle” Silurian of the World three major positive excursions have been identified: in the early and latest Wenlock and in the late Ludlow. The general character of the carbon isotope trend and stratigraphical positions of the excursions established in this paper demonstrate that in Podolia there occurs the same set of global shifts, which can be used for the improvement of regional and global correlation of Wenlock and Ludlow sections of that area. Some refinements are suggested, but some details need additional study.http://kirj.ee/public/Estonian_Journal_of_Earth_Sciences/2007/issue_4/earth-2007-4-2.pdfcarbon isotopescorrelationPodoliaSilurianstratigraphyUkraine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kaljo, Dimitri
Grytsenko, Volodymyr
Martma, Tõnu
Mõtus, Mari-Ann
spellingShingle Kaljo, Dimitri
Grytsenko, Volodymyr
Martma, Tõnu
Mõtus, Mari-Ann
Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implications
Estonian Journal of Earth Sciences
carbon isotopes
correlation
Podolia
Silurian
stratigraphy
Ukraine
author_facet Kaljo, Dimitri
Grytsenko, Volodymyr
Martma, Tõnu
Mõtus, Mari-Ann
author_sort Kaljo, Dimitri
title Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implications
title_short Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implications
title_full Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implications
title_fullStr Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implications
title_full_unstemmed Three global carbon isotope shifts in the Silurian of Podolia (Ukraine): stratigraphical implications
title_sort three global carbon isotope shifts in the silurian of podolia (ukraine): stratigraphical implications
publisher Estonian Academy Publishers
series Estonian Journal of Earth Sciences
issn 1736-4728
publishDate 2007-12-01
description Podolia is a classical Silurian area in the southwestern part of the Ukraine. Shallow to open shelf rocks cropping out there are usually, except for a few dolomitic horizons, highly fossiliferous and therefore the biostratigraphy of the region has a long successful history. The Ukrainian meeting of the Subcommission on Silurian Stratigraphy of the International Union of Geological Sciences, held in 1983, became an important milestone. Tsegelnyuk et al. summarized different results and views in a field guide published for the meeting (The Silurian of Podolia. The Guide to Excursion. Naukova Dumka, Kiev, 1983) and introduced a practically new stratigraphical terminology, and in some parts of the section, also new age interpretation of the beds. For our paper carbon isotopes were studied in eight sections on the banks of the Dniester River and its tributaries, covering ca 80% of the Silurian succession (Pridoli excluded). Three positive δ13C excursions were identified. The first excursion in the Kitaigorod 30 section reaches its peak value of 4.0‰ in the very bottom of the Demshin Subformation. The second shift reaches the peak value of 4.3‰ in the middle of the Muksha Subformation. The third shift is the most prominent one identified in the Silurian of Podolia – δ13C values increase steadily through the Isakovtsy Subformation, reaching 6.9‰ in the top, and a slightly lower value of 6.6‰ occurs in the bottom of the Prigorodok Formation. In the “middle” Silurian of the World three major positive excursions have been identified: in the early and latest Wenlock and in the late Ludlow. The general character of the carbon isotope trend and stratigraphical positions of the excursions established in this paper demonstrate that in Podolia there occurs the same set of global shifts, which can be used for the improvement of regional and global correlation of Wenlock and Ludlow sections of that area. Some refinements are suggested, but some details need additional study.
topic carbon isotopes
correlation
Podolia
Silurian
stratigraphy
Ukraine
url http://kirj.ee/public/Estonian_Journal_of_Earth_Sciences/2007/issue_4/earth-2007-4-2.pdf
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