Migration of sharks into freshwater systems during the Miocene and implications for Alpine paleoelevation


Autoria(s): Kocsis L.; Vennemann T.W.; Fontignie D.
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

Trace-element and isotopic compositions of fossilized shark teeth sampled from Miocene marine sediments of the north Alpine Molasse Basin, the Vienna Basin, and the Pannonian Basin generally show evidence of formation in a marine environment under conditions geochemically equivalent to the open ocean. In contrast, two of eight shark teeth from the Swiss Upper Marine Molasse locality of La Moliere have extremely low delta O-18 values (10.3% and 11.3%) and low Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios (0.707840 and 0.707812) compared to other teeth from this locality (21.1%,22.4%o and 0.708421-0.708630). The rare earth element (REE) abundances and patterns from La Moliere not only differ between dentine and enameloid of the same tooth, but also between different teeth, supporting variable conditions of diagenesis at this site. However, the REE patterns of enameloid from the ``exotic'' teeth analyzed for O and Sr isotopic compositions are similar to those of teeth that have O and Sr isotopic compositions typical of a marine setting at this site. Collectively, this suggests that the two ``exotic'' teeth were formed while the sharks frequented a freshwater environment with very low O-18-content and Sr isotopic composition controlled by Mesozoic calcareous rocks. This is consistent with a paleogeography of high-elevation (similar to 2300 m) Miocene Alps adjacent to a marginal sea.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_16DF9B2806CA

doi:10.1130/G23404A.1

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Geology, vol. 35, pp. 451-454

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article