Weissert Event

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The Weissert Event, also referred to as the Weissert Thermal Excursion (WTX),[1] was a hyperthermal event that occurred in the Valanginian stage of the Early Cretaceous epoch.[2] This thermal excursion occurred amidst the relatively cool Tithonian-early Barremian Cool Interval (TEBCI).[1] Its termination marked an intense cooling event,[3] potentially even an ice age.[4]

The start of the WTX has been astrochronologically dated by one study to 134.50 ± 0.19 million years ago (Ma), with its positive δ13C excursion being found to last until 133.96 ± 0.19 Ma and the plateau phase of elevated δ13C values until 132.44 ± 0.19 Ma.[5] However, astrochronological studies of sediments in the Vocontian Basin have yielded a duration of 2.08 Myr, with the positive δ13C excursion being 0.94 Myr in duration and the δ13C plateau being 1.14 Myr.[6] A different study concludes the WTX lasted for about 1.4 million years (Myr) based on the chronological length of the high δ13C plateau observed over its course in the Bersek Marl Formation of Hungary.[7]

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