Hayward, Bruce W.; Kawagata, Shungo; Grenfell, Hugh R.; Sabaa, Ashwaq T.; O'Neill, Tanya (2007): Last global extinction in the deep sea during the mid-Pleistocene climate transition. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States, Paleoceanography, 22 (3), georefid:2009-007664

Abstract:
Twenty percent (19 genera, 95 species) of cosmopolitan, deep-sea (500-4000 m), benthic foraminiferal species became extinct during the late Pliocene-middle Pleistocene (3-0.12 Ma), with the peak of extinctions (76 species) occurring during the mid-Pleistocene Climate Transition (MPT, 1.2-0.55 Ma). One whole family (Stilostomellidae, 30 species) was wiped out, and a second (Pleurostomellidae, 29 species) was decimated with just one species possibly surviving through to the present. Our studies at 21 deep-sea core sites show widespread pulsed declines in abundance and diversity of the extinction group species during more extreme glacials, with partial interglacial recoveries. These declines started in the late Pliocene in southern sourced deep water masses (Antarctic Bottom Water, Circumpolar Deep Water) and extending into intermediate waters (Antarctic Intermediate Water, North Atlantic Deep Water) in the MPT, with the youngest declines in sites farthest downstream from high-latitude source areas for intermediate waters. (modif. j. abst.)
Coverage:
West: -79.5200 East: 59.4746 North: 55.2906 South: 16.3313
Relations:
Expedition: 117
Site: 117-722
Expedition: 162
Site: 162-980
Expedition: 165
Site: 165-1000
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=10.1029/2007PA001424 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
Data download: application/pdf
This metadata in ISO19139 XML format