Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Revised Wonoka isotopic anomaly in South Australia and Late Ediacaran mass extinction

September 1, 2014

The global Late Ediacaran Shuram–Wonoka carbon isotope anomaly has been regarded as the largest and longest known isotopic anomaly in the ocean, assuming that all Ediacaran carbonate is marine. Disregarding carbonate in South Australia shown here to be palaeosol or palaeokarst, the synchronous marine organic–carbonate excursion is only −8‰ for δ13C organic and −6‰ for δ13C carbonate, and lasted less than a million years. This revised magnitude and duration is comparable with perturbations across the Permian–Triassic boundary, and correlative with a global Late Ediacaran acritarch mass extinction. Like Permian–Triassic isotopic excursions, the revised organic–carbonate Wonoka excursion may also have been a greenhouse palaeoclimatic warm spike, which terminated valley incision and glacioeustatic drawdown during the mid-Ediacaran Fauquier Glaciation, and preceded chill of the Late Ediacaran Billy Springs Glaciation.

Publication Year 2014
Title Revised Wonoka isotopic anomaly in South Australia and Late Ediacaran mass extinction
DOI 10.1144/jgs2014-016
Authors Gregory J. Retallack, André Marconato, Jeffery T. Osterhout, Kathryn E. Watts, Ilya N. Bindeman
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of the Geological Society
Index ID 70206601
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center