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      Loess in eastern equatorial Pangea archives a dusty atmosphere and possible upland glaciation

      1 , 1 , 2 , 3
      GSA Bulletin
      Geological Society of America

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          Abstract

          Carboniferous–Permian strata in basins within the Central Pangean Mountains in France archive regional paleoequatorial climate during a unique interval in geological history (Pangea assembly, ice-age collapse, megamonsoon inception). The voluminous (∼1.5 km) succession of exclusively fine-grained red beds that comprises the Permian Salagou Formation (Lodève Basin, France) has long been interpreted to record either lacustrine or fluvial deposition, primarily based on a local emphasis of subaqueous features in the upper ∼25% of the section. In contrast, data presented here indicate that the lower-middle Salagou Formation is dominated by up to 15-m-thick beds of internally massive red mudstone with abundant pedogenic features (microscale) and no evidence of channeling. Up-section, limited occurrences of ripple and hummocky cross-stratification, and mudcracks record the intermittent influence of shallow water, but with no channeling nor units with grain sizes exceeding coarse silt. These data suggest that the most parsimonious interpretation for the Salagou Formation involves eolian transport of the sediment and ultimate deposition as loess in shallow, ephemeral lacustrine environments. Provenance analyses of the Salagou Formation indicate coarse-grained protoliths and, together with geochemical proxies (chemical index of alteration [CIA] and τNa) that correspond respectively to a low degree of chemical weathering and a mean annual temperature of ∼4 °C, suggest that silt generation in this case is most consistent with cold-weathering (glacial and associated periglacial) processes in the Variscan highlands. Together with previous studies that detailed voluminous Permian loess in western equatorial Pangea, this work shows a globally unique distribution of dust at low latitudes that can be linked either directly to glaciated alpine terranes or to reworked and deflated deposits of other types (e.g., fluvial outwash) where fine-grained material was originally generated from glacial grinding in alpine systems. These results further support a revised model for early Permian climate, in which extratropical ice sheets coexisted with a semiarid tropics that may have hosted significant ice at moderate elevation.

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          Early Proterozoic climates and plate motions inferred from major element chemistry of lutites

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            Correlation between climate events in the North Atlantic and China during the last glaciation

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              The “North American shale composite”: Its compilation, major and trace element characteristics

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                GSA Bulletin
                Geological Society of America
                0016-7606
                1943-2674
                June 19 2020
                January 1 2021
                June 19 2020
                January 1 2021
                : 133
                : 1-2
                : 379-392
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Geosciences, University of Oklahoma, 100 East Boyd Street, Norman, Oklahoma 73019, USA
                [2 ]CNRS UMR 6112, Université de Nantes, Laboratoire de Planétologie et de Géodynamique, 2 rue de la Houssinière, Nantes F-44000, France
                [3 ]Université de Rennes, CNRS, Géosciences Rennes-UMR 6118, F-35000 Rennes, France
                Article
                10.1130/B35590.1
                20bef044-84a7-4edd-80d5-577c474003c5
                © 2021
                History

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