“…In fact, the OAE 1d carbon isotope anomaly has been identified worldwide in variable depositional settings, thus suggesting a potential global extent of this event. In particular, it has been widely recognized in the western Tethys Ocean (Erbacher and Thurow, 1997;Gale et al, 1996;Stoll and Schrag, 2000;Strasser et al, 2001;Bornemann et al, 2005;Reichelt, 2005;Sprovieri et al, 2013;Gambacorta et al, 2015;Giorgioni et al, 2015;Bąk et al, 2016;Gyawali et al, 2017), in the eastern Tethys Ocean (Vahrenkamp, 2013;Zhang et al, 2016;Wohlwend et al, 2016;Hennhoefer et al, 2018;Yao et al, 2018;Navidtalab et al, 2019), in the northern Tethys (Melinte-Dobrinescu et al, 2015), in the Atlantic Ocean (Wilson and Norris, 2001;Nederbragt et al, 2001;Petrizzo et al, 2008;Ando et al, 2010), in the Pacific Ocean (Takashima et al, 2004;Robinson et al, 2008;Navarro-Ramirez et al, 2015;Rodriguez-Cuicas et al, 2019, 2020, in the Western Interior Seaway (North America) (Gröcke et al, 2006;Gröcke and Joeckel, 2008;Scott et al, 2013;Richey et al, 2018), in the Boreal Realm (Mitchell et al, 1996;Bornemann et al, 2017), and in the Indian Ocean (Madhavaraju et al, 2015).…”