%0 Generic %A Pointon, Michael A. %A Chew, David M. %A Ovtcharova, Maria %A Sevastopulo, George D. %A Crowley, Quentin G. %D 2016 %T New high-precision U–Pb dates from western European Carboniferous tuffs; implications for time scale calibration, the periodicity of late Carboniferous cycles and stratigraphical correlation %U https://geolsoc.figshare.com/articles/dataset/New_high-precision_U_Pb_dates_from_western_European_Carboniferous_tuffs_implications_for_time_scale_calibration_the_periodicity___of_late_Carboniferous_cycles_and_stratigraphical_correlation/3453122 %R 10.6084/m9.figshare.3453122.v1 %2 https://ndownloader.figshare.com/files/5421719 %2 https://ndownloader.figshare.com/files/5421722 %K 100  ka eccentricity cycle %K European sequences %K facies belts %K stratigraphical correlation %K cyclic sedimentation %K biostratigraphical correlations %K Namurian cycles %K Carboniferous cycles %K cyclic siliciclastic %K time scale calibration %K ash layers %K European Carboniferous tuffs %K European Carboniferous diagenetically %K 124  ka %K Westphalian B %K Moscovian stage %K Geology %X

We present three new high-precision U–Pb zircon chemical abrasion–isotope dilution–thermal ionization mass spectrometry (CA-ID-TIMS) dates from western European Carboniferous diagenetically altered volcanic ash layers (bentonites and tonsteins) that occur interbedded with cyclic siliciclastic sedimentary rocks. The dates constrain the average periodicity of western European late Carboniferous (Arnsbergian to early Langsettian) cyclic sedimentation to between 89 and 124 ka per cycle. This is consistent with the 100 ka ‘short’ eccentricity Milankovitch cycle and supports previous suggestions that the cycles are the product of glacio-eustasy. Cyclostratigraphic tuning of Namurian cycles to the 100 ka eccentricity cycle revises the timing of the global Mississippian–Pennsylvanian boundary to c. 323.9 Ma. CA-ID-TIMS dates also facilitate correlation between different facies belts where biostratigraphical correlations are difficult. Correlation between eastern and western European sequences confirms that the base of the Moscovian stage is located within the Duckmantian (Westphalian B) western European regional substage.

%I Geological Society of London