982 resultados para 117-722
Resumo:
The calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy of ODP Leg 177 Sites 1088 and 1090 (Subantarctic sector from the Atlantic Ocean) is discussed. Most nannofossil zonal boundaries of Martini (1971) and Okada and Bukry (1980) were recognized for the studied mid-high-latitude sediments. Conventional low-latitude marker species such as Amaurolithus spp., Discoaster spp., Triquetrorhabdulus spp., Ceratolithus spp. were recorded as rare and scattered, which impeded the development of a detailed nannofossil biostratigraphic zonation of some Miocene and Pliocene intervals. Because of the absence of some primary biostratigraphic marker species, additional second-order bioevents, such as the first occurrence of Calcidiscus macintyrei and the last occurrence of Coccolithus miopelagicus, have been used to approximate the base of zones NN7 and NN8, respectively. Several disconformities disturbing the Pliocene and Miocene intervals of Site 1090 could be determined based on nannofossil distribution although the occurrence of intervals with dissolved nannofloras and low species diversity prevented a reliable age assignment. An acme of small Gephyrocapsa was recognized near the lower/middle Pliocene boundary, close to the NN15-NN16 zonal boundary, presenting an event for further improvement of the calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy of this interval time. The first occurrence of Pseudoemiliania lacunosa (>4 µm) occurs close to this interval, representing a fairly reliable event to approximate the base of NN15 zone when other biozonal events are absent. A paracme of R. pseudoumbilicus (>7 µm) was detected in the lower Pliocene NN12 and in the upper Miocene NN11. These temporary absences of the species seem to be isochronous between high-latitude and low-middle-latitude areas.
Resumo:
During the late Pliocene-middle Pleistocene, 63 species of elongate, bathyal-upper abyssal benthic foraminifera (Extinction Group = Stilostomellidae, Pleurostomellidae, some Nodosariidae) declined in abundance and finally disappeared in the northern Indian Ocean (ODP Sites 722, 758), as part of the global extinction of at least 88 related species at this time. The detailed record of withdrawal of these species differs by depth and geography in the Indian Ocean. In northwest Indian Ocean Site 722 (2045 m), the Extinction Group of 54 species comprised 2-15% of the benthic foraminiferal fauna in the earliest Pleistocene, but declined dramatically during the onset of the mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT) at 1.2-1.1 Ma, with all but three species disappearing by the end of the MPT (~0.6 Ma). In northeast Indian Ocean Site 758 (2925 m), the Extinction Group of 44 species comprised 1-5% of the benthic foraminiferal fauna at ~3.3-2.6 Ma, but declined in abundance and diversity in three steps, at ~2.5, 1.7, and 1.2 Ma, with all but one species disappearing by the end of the MPT. At both sites there are strong positive correlations between the accumulation rate of the Extinction Group and proxies indicating low-oxygen conditions with a high organic carbon input. In both sites, there was a pulsed decline in Extinction Group abundance and species richness, especially in glacial periods, with some partial recoveries in interglacials. We infer that the glacial declines at the deeper Site 758 were a result of increased production of colder, well-ventilated Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW), particularly in the late Pliocene and during the MPT. The Extinction Group at shallower water depths (Site 722) were not impacted by the deeper water mass changes until the onset of the MPT, when cold, well-ventilated Glacial North Atlantic Intermediate Water (GNAIW) production increased and may have spread into the Indian Ocean. Increased chemical ventilation at various water depths since late Pliocene, particularly in glacial periods, possibly in association with decreased or more fluctuating organic carbon flux, might be responsible for the pulsed global decline and extinction of this rather specialised group of benthic foraminifera.